Howlite
Posted by: macadmin on 05.14.2020 | Filed under:

Howlite

Specimen # 100388
Mineral: Howlite
Location: Howlite, Bras D'Or Lake, Iona, Victoria Co., Nova Scotia, Canada
Size: 4.2 x 2.8 x 1.2 cm

Description

Detailed Description

This specimen features a large 2.0 cm cluster of howlite crystals on a thin plate of anhydrite.  At the top of the cluster (as I would display it – in the first photograph), the crystal terminations are sharp and lustrous. At the bottom of the cluster the terminations and edges are frostier, evidencing exposure to the seawater. No damage. Collected in 2002. Could be trimmed to a thumbnail-sized specimen. Great piece.


About These Howlites

These are from the world’s only known locality for howlite crystals, and these ones are superb.

This relatively remote occurrence is fascinating – the howlite crystals occur enclosed in solid, tough bedded anhydrite, exposed in a limited section of cliffs by the ocean. (Anhydrite may not sound “tough”, but collecting there is like collecting the fresh, sharp rock beds at Herkimer!) These crystals become exposed as the seawater turns the anhydrite into gypsum, which flakes away. To date, no other method of exposing them (without damaging them) has been devised. Of course, the difficulty is obvious: the howlite crystals are very delicate and the waves are not gentle! Very few high-quality howlite crystal clusters survive the process, and far fewer are successfully preserved and collected.

This group of specimens is from the collection of well-known Nova Scotia collector Terry Collett. These howlites were collected over an eleven-year period from 2001 through 2012. Although a small number of howlites will continue to come out, it will be some time before another lot of high-quality howlites has been collected, and it will be tough to find ones comparable to the best of these.

Additional information

Dimensions 42 × 28 × 12 cm

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