Milarite

Milarite is a very rare gem. Crystals are colorless, pale green, yellowish green and yellowish. Most crystals are not facetable but occasional very small gemmy crystals are found. There are very few sources for Milarite crystals. These include St. Gotthard, Switzerland; Minas Gerais, Southeast Region, Brazil; Guanajuato, Mexico; Fujian Province, China; Arandis, Swakopmund District, Erongo Region, Namibia and Albany, Carrol County, New Hampshire, USA. 


 

Category: Osumilite Group
Formula: K2Ca4Al2Be4Si24O60 · H2O
Crystallography: Hexagonal – Dihexagonal Dipyramidal
Crystal Habit: Typically as well-formed hexagonal prisms, to 4 cm; as radial-fibrous aggregates and intergrowths.
Twinning: None

 

Cleavage: [0001] Imperfect, [1120] Imperfect
Fracture: Conchoidal to Uneven
Tenacity: Brittle
Hardness (Mohs): 5.5 – 6.0
Density: 2.46 – 2.61 (g/cm3)
Luminescence: Some specimens may be fluorescent
Radioactivity: Barely Detectable; GRapi = 56.71 (Gamma Ray American Petroleum Institute Units)

 

Color: Colorless, White, Greenish White, Yellowish White
Transparency: Transparent to Translucent, Opaque
Luster: Vitreous
Refractive Index: 1.532 – 1.548  Uniaxial ( – ); anomalously Biaxial, sectored, with a Uniaxial core
Birefringence: 0.0030 – 0.0160
Dispersion: n/a
Pleochroism: n/a