CAVANSITE

 

The large stilbite-heulandite plate shown below has dozens of nice, subspherical masses of dark blue cavansite crystals.  Cavansite is a rare mineral first described in the literature in the late 1960s based on a minor occurrence in Oregon.  In the early 1970s, high-quality, richly colored cavansite was found in quarries of western India (near Ahmadnagar, Poona District, Maharashtra State).  The specimen shown below is from there.

 

Cavansite is a hydrous calcium vanadosilicate (Ca(VO)Si4O10·4(H2O)).  In western India, it occurs as a secondary mineral filling voids in breccias & basalts in the Deccan Traps succession, a Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary-aged (65 m.y.) flood basalt deposit.

 

Cavansite has a glassy, nonmetallic luster, bluish color, bluish streak, a hardness of 3 to 4, has cleavage, and conchoidal fracture.

 

Cavansite blueberries (~1-2 cm in size) on plate of stilbite and heulandite from western India (CM public display, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA).

 


 

Some info. from:

 

Mookherjee & Phadke (1998) - Gondwana Geological Magazine 13(2): 23-27.

Powar & Byrappa (2001) - Journal of Mineralogical and Petrological Sciences 96: 1-6.

 


 

Photo gallery of cavansite

 


 

Home page