Pyrite: So Much More Than Just Fool’s Gold

Take a deep dive into one of geology’s most interesting minerals, Pyrite! Thank You to DGMS Member – Rich P. for sharing some fascinating facts and and pictures of Pyrite from his personal collection!


Pyrite

I pity the fool that mistakes Pyrite for Gold (like $1.00/oz. vs $1,800/oz.). But maybe I’m the fool, because I’m simply fascinated with “fool’s Gold”. How in the world can a mineral form a perfect cube in nature? Seems impossible, but it’s true, so I set out to figure out how this can be.

To start with the mineral Pyrite is iron sulfate with the chemical formula FeS2. So, what we’re looking at here is a single Iron atom bonded with two Sulfide atoms. This gives Pyrite the capability to form simple cuboidal crystals when all the environmental things are right. Every crystal has an orderly, internal pattern of atoms, with a distinctive way of locking new atoms into that pattern to repeat it again and again. The shape of the resulting crystal can be a cube, as in salt crystals or pyrite. I can’t follow all the chemical reaction that occurs, but I can tell you that some, not all Pyrite crystals are in the form of a perfect cube in nature. The one pictured above was not cut or shaped except by nature.  

Pyrite is thought to be the most common of the sulfide minerals. So, you say, hard and stinky? Well not really. The name Pyrite comes from the Greek word pyr, “fire” because sparks can be made when you strike Pyrite with steel. So, in a way, because of my fascination with Pyrite you could call me a “pyritemaniac”! Ha! Well, maybe not. But I digress. 

Pyrite is considered “the most harmful of all the minerals” according to Robert Finkelman a professor at UT Dallas. What! That’s right, professor Finkelman stated that “Pyrite binds arsenic in coal. When coal burns, Pyrite is oxidized thus releasing arsenic. For instance, the occupational lung disease of miners is caused by Pyrite. Pyrite is a main source of acid gases in the atmosphere.” So, what is Pyrite used for you ask? Pyrite is used in the production of sulfur dioxide, in applications like the paper industry and the manufacture of sulfuric acid.

If you are into metaphysical properties, you may want to go pick some up. According to energymuse.com:

“If you’re lacking motivation or physical strength, call on the Pyrite crystal meaning and reconnect to Mother Nature with this power stone that harnesses the earth element, the powerful energies that ground you and guide your spirit to a place of higher wisdom. If you’ re ready to take action to achieve your dreams and aspirations, be a rock star at meditation practice when you incorporate Pyrite and its divine guidance.”

But if you’re like me, then you just might like the mineral because of the way it looks and the way it forms a perfect cube in nature. But wait! There’s more.

As I’m sure many of you have seen, and like me, love a good “Pyrite Sun”, which is also known as “Miners Dollars”, “Pyrite Dollars”, or even “Sun Dollars”. But as stated on the illinoisstatemueum.com web site:

“..don’t call them fossils. They may look like fossilized plants, but the crystal structures actually formed deep underground under great pressure about 350 million years ago. These round disks sometimes occur between seams of coal and may be found when coal is mined. Although pyrite is quite common worldwide, the disk form is virtually unique to Illinois.”

I always just thought they were a pretty neat fossil, but they form naturally and that is really cool. But don’t get me wrong, in some fossil deposits Pyrite can be incorporated into bone, shells, or plant fossils during the process of fossilization. About a quarter way around the world, near England, is just one area where you can find some great Pyrite Ammonite fossils. 

From Wikipedia.org: “Ammonoids are a group of extinct marine mollusc animals in the subclass Ammonoidea of the class Cephalopoda. These molluscs, commonly referred to as ammonites, are more closely related to living coleoids (i.e., octopuses, squid, and cuttlefish) than they are to shelled nautiloids such as the living Nautilus species.[1] The earliest ammonites appear during the Devonian, and the last species vanished in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.”

But as I stated in the beginning of this, maybe I’m the fool, because I’m simply fascinated with “fool’s Gold”. There are some really unique and crazy things associated with fool’s gold that make this one of the really cool minerals that I collect. Although, I am looking to a big chunk of “REAL” gold for my collection if you happen to have one cheap.

1. [1] Klug, Christian; Kröger, Björn; Vinther, Jakob; Fuchs, Dirk (August 2015). “Ancestry, Origin and Early Evolution of Ammonoids”. In Christian Klug; Dieter Korn; Kenneth De Baets; Isabelle Kruta; Royal H. Mapes (eds.). Ammonoid Paleobiology: From macroevolution to paleogeography. Topics in Geobiology 44. Springer. p. 3-24. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-9633-0_1.


Do you have a favorite mineral that you’d like to share with us?
Just let us know by writing up a short article & include some jpgs!
Email it to: dgms.sec@gmail.com

March Birthstone: Aquamarine

This month, we celebrate a most beautiful birthstone, Aquamarine! Aquamarine is a color variety of the mineral Beryl. What’s fun about Beryl is that if it falls toward the BLUE color side, it’s AQUAMARINE, if it falls towards the GREEN side, it’s EMERALD, and if it’s PINK, it’s MORGANITE! They are all the same gemstones, just different colors!

Aquamarine Bead Bracelets that show the soft and varying shades of blue.

Fun Aquamarine Facts:

  • Mohs Hardness – 7.5 – 8
  • It gets its name from Latin “aqua marina” which means “sea water.”
  • The traditional gift for the 19th Wedding Anniversary
  • Mostly mined in Brazil, but also in many countries across the world, including Zambia, Nigeria, and Madagascar, as well as Pakistan and Mozambique
  • Considered a symbol of faithfulness, courage, and friendship

The Dom Pedro aquamarine is the world’s largest cut aquamarine gem. Weighs 10,363 carats.


February Birthstone: Amethyst

Welcome to February! According to Punxsutawney Phil, spring is just around the corner (not that it’s been a terribly awful one here in Texas this year)!

Besides being the month of love and transition, February is also associated with the mineral Amethyst. Amethyst is a variety of Quartz and gets its iconic purple color from trace amounts of iron that have been naturally irradiated. It is found throughout the world, even here in the United States, but the most significant deposits are located in Brazil and Uruguay. Fantastic specimens weighing thousands of pounds have been found in the fractures of igneous rock there.

World’s largest Amethyst Geode. Almost 11 feet tall and weighs over 5,500 pounds!!

If you are interested in the history or spiritual side of Amethyst, this special mineral has been highlighted in religions for thousands of years. Amethyst was one of the stones in the Bible of the High Priest’s breastplate representing the 12 tribes of Israel. In ancient Egypt, Amethyst was worn by the Pharaohs to help ward off evil and misfortune. Amethyst derives from the Greek word “amethystos” which may be translated as “not drunken”. Ancient Greeks used it to ward off drunkenness. And modern crystal healers associate Amethyst with relieving stress, bringing inner peace, and clearing negativity.

Amethyst - Dallas Gem and Mineral Society

Rok’n Around the Christmas Tree!

WOW! Can you even believe the year is coming to an end?

It seems like only yesterday that our 62nd Annual DGMS Show was happening… but it happened… and it was FANTASTIC!!!! So many people, vendors, gems and minerals!! We have a special announcement from one of our Show Chairs:

On behalf of the Dallas Gem and Mineral Society, I would like to thank everyone that helped make our show great. This includes our many vendors that donated to our silent auction, the Hotel for helping with the space and the great food, our Club members for donating many of the rocks for the show and silent auction. I would like to send out a very Large Thank-You to our Volunteers – they are the very backbone of our show. They have spent many days and hours setting up, organizing, identifying specimens, loading and unloading the truck, and way too many things to list at this time. Looking forward to seeing all of you next year!

Sincerely, Lynn Couvillion 

I’m looking to get some great pics from the show, but in the meantime here are a couple of the beautiful Fluorescent Display from this year! Unbelievable that nature produces such hidden beauties! Look so nondescript by day… but AMAZING under UV!!!

Dallas Gem and Mineral Society - Fluorescent Display, White Light
Dallas Gem and Mineral Society - Fluorescent Display, UV Light

And can’t forget to let you know….

Our final 2019 club meeting (aka Party) is coming up soon! It will be held on Tuesday, December 17. Please bring a rock-related (gem, mineral, fossil, jewelry, lapidary, etc) wrapped gift valued at no more than $20. If you bring a gift, you will get a gift. There will be no ‘stealing’ of gifts, but feel free to exchange with each other after all gifts are opened. 

We will also be having a pot luck dinner. The meat will be brisket made by Lynn Couvililon and a Turkey or Ham that will be paid for by the Club.  We will need one volunteer to cook the turkey or ham. Please use the following link to sign up for the Pot Luck. Please review the list before adding your favorite recipe so we don’t end up with six green bean casseroles and no desserts.

Use the link below to access the pot luck signup: 

  >>  http://www.luckypotluck.com/potluck/DGMSxmas2019

Dallas Gem and Mineral Society - Seraphinite

Maybe think about topping your tree this year with Seraphinite!! If you don’t know it, it is a beautiful stone….

Seraphinite apparently acquired its name due to its resemblance to feathers due to its chatoyancy. Seraphinite is named after the biblical seraphs or seraphim angels.[1] With some specimens the resemblance is quite strong, with shorter down-like feathery growths leading into longer “flight feathers”; the resemblance even spurs fanciful marketing phrases like “silver plume seraphinite.” Seraphinite is generally dark green to gray in color, has chatoyancy, and has hardness between 2 and 4 on the Mohs scale of mineral hardness.

How amazing is Geology? A Diamond With a Whole Other Diamond Inside Discovered!

Check out this article on ScienceAlert.com
It describes one of the most fantastic diamond finds ever!

“A new stone hauled from the belly of the Earth could very well be a first. The diamond itself is hollow – and inside is another diamond, freely moving around.”