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FULGURITE Lightning Glass CRATER LAKE VOLCANIC ASH Mineral Specimen MONTANA

$ 2.1

Availability: 30 in stock
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Type: Fulgurite
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Weight: 3.60 grams
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Size: 30 mm x 22 mm x 17 mm

    Description

    This specimen weighs 3.60 grams. It measures 30 mm x 22 mm x 17 mm.
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    Hi there. I am selling this really awesome fulgurite mineral specimen. This was discovered on Columbia Mountain, in the Swan Mountain Range of Northern Montana. It was analyzed by a geologist in the National Park Service and determined to be composed of volcanic ash deposited by the eruption of Mt. Mazama in Oregon which formed Crater Lake! THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS TO SAND AND ROCK WHEN IT GETS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING! It instantly fuses into this amazing glass! I love this stuff, it is one of my favorite minerals! If you have any questions, do not hesitate to ask me. Have fun bidding, thanks so much for visiting my auction and have a great day!
    The following is a wikipedia entry about this mineral:
    Fulgurite
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Fulgurite
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    [show]Parallel view (Stereogram guide parallel.png)
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    Two Type I (arenaceous) fulgurites: a common tube fulgurite and a more irregular specimen.
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    [show]Parallel view (Stereogram guide parallel.png)
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    Two small Type I Saharan Desert fulgurites. In a planar view the specimen on the right has a blade-like morphology, but its tubular nature is dramatically shown in a stereo view.
    metric attributes
    Fulgurites (from the Latin fulgur, meaning "lightning") are natural tubes, clumps, or masses of sintered, vitrified, and/or fused soil, sand, rock, organic debris and other sediments that can form when lightning discharges into ground. They are classified as a variety of the mineraloid lechatelierite, although their absolute chemical composition is dependent on the physical and chemical properties of the usually granular-crystalline material providing an electrically and thermally conductive dissipation network for lightning-facilitated energy transfer. They are commonly hollow and/or branching assemblages of glassy, protocrystalline, and heterogeneously microcrystalline tubes, crusts, slags, vesicular masses, and clusters of refractory materials that often form during the discharge phase of lightning strikes propagating into silica-rich quartzose sand, mixed soil, clay, or other sediments.[1][2] Fulgurites are homologous to Lichtenberg figures, which are the branching patterns produced on surfaces of insulators during dielectric breakdown by high-voltage discharges, such as lightning.[3][4]
    Contents  [hide]
    1
    Description
    2
    Classification
    3
    Place in planetary processes and the geologic record
    4
    In material culture
    5
    Gallery
    6
    See also
    7
    References
    8
    External links
    Description[edit]
    Fulgurites are formed when lightning strikes the ground, fusing and vitrifying mineral grains.[5] The peak temperatures within a lightning channel are known to exceed 30,000 K, with sufficient pressure to produce planar deformation features, or "shock lamellae" in SiO2 polymorphs.[6][7][8] "Artificial fulgurites" can also be produced when the controlled arcing of electricity into a fusable medium. Downed high voltage power lines have produced blue, fulgurite-like lechatelierites, colored by copper from the power lines, themselves.[9]
    The color of fulgurites varies widely, depending on composition and chemical impurities. Most natural fulgurites fall on a spectrum from white to black, but moderate iron content can result in a deep brownish-green coloration. More colorful variants are usually synthetic and reflect incorporation of synthetic materials. The interior of Type I (sand) fulgurites normally is very smooth or lined with fine bubbles, while other types are often both vesicular and dense or scoria-like; their exteriors generally can be coated with rough sedimentary particles and can be porous, smooth, or structurally complex. Branching fulgurites display fractal-like self-similarity and structural scale invariance as a macroscopic or microscopic network of root-like branches. Fulgurites formed in sand or loose soil are mechanically fragile, making the field collection of large specimens difficult.
    The primary SiO2 phase in fulgurites is lechatelierite, a silica glass. Because their groundmass is generally amorphous in structure, fulgurites are classified as mineraloids.
    Fulgurites can exceed tens of centimeters in diameter and can penetrate deep into the subsoil, sometimes occurring as far as 15 m (49 ft) below the surface that was struck, but may form directly on appropriate sedimentary surfaces.[10] One of the longest fulgurites to have been found in modern times was a little over 4.9 m (16 ft) in length, and was found in northern Florida.[11] The Yale University Peabody Museum of Natural History displays one of the longest known preserved fulgurites, approximately 4 m (13 ft) in length.[12] Charles Darwin in The Voyage of the Beagle recorded that tubes such as these found in Drigg, Cumberland, UK reached a length of 9.1 m (30 ft).[13][14] The Winans Lake fulgurite[s] (Winans Lake, Livingston County, Michigan), extended discontinuously throughout a 30 m range, and arguably includes the largest reported fulgurite mass ever recovered and described - its largest section extending approximately 16 ft (4.88 m) in length by 1 ft in diameter (30 cm).[2][15]
    Classification[edit]
    Fulgurites have been classified by Pasek et al. (2012)[16] into five types related to the type of sediment in which the fulgurite formed, as follows:
    Type I - sand fulgurites with tubaceous structure; their central axial void may be collapsed
    Type II - soil fulgurites; these are glass-rich, and form in a wide range of sediment compositions, including clay-rich soils, silt-rich soils, gravel-rich soils, and loessoid; these may be tubaceous, branching, vesicular, irregular/slaggy, or may display a combination of these structures, and can produce exogenic fulgurites (droplet fulgurites)
    Type III - caliche or calcic sediment fulgurites, having thick, often surficially glazed granular walls with calcium-rich vitreous groundmass with little or no lechatelierite glass; their shapes are variable, with multiple narrow central channels common, and can span the entire range of morphological and structural variation for fulguritic objects
    Type IV - rock fulgurites, which are either crusts on minimally altered rocks, networks of tunneling within rocks, vesicular outgassed rocks (often glazed by a silicide-rich and/or metal oxide crust), or completely vitrified and dense rock material and masses of these forms with little sedimentary groundmass
    Droplet fulgurites (exogenic fulgurites), which are exogenous (e.g. spheroidal, botryoidal, filamentous, or aerodynamic),[1][17] related by composition to Type II and Type IV fulgurites
    Place in planetary processes and the geologic record[edit]
    Many observations have been made in fulgurites of high-pressure, high-temperature materials more commonly assumed to be exclusive to meteoritic sources, products of asteroid impacts, comet airbursts, or cosmic dust. Such materials - as a suite - formerly considered to be unique to hypervelocity impacts, have been identified in fulgurites, including highly reduced silicon-metal alloys (silicides), the fullerene allotropes C60 (buckminsterfullerene) and C70, as well as high-pressure polymorphs of SiO2, in fulgurites.[2][6][15][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]
    Reduced phosphorus as phosphides and phosphites have been identified through quantitative analyses of a representative sample of 10 fulgurites recovered from most continents, in the form of schreibersite (Fe3P, (Fe,Ni)3P) - otherwise extremely rare on Earth, but common in meteorites, comets, interplanetary dust, and some planetary bodies - and TiP, which is unique to fulgurites.[2][28][29]
    In material culture[edit]
    A fulgurite was found within the contents of the ash altar at the temple of Lykaian Zeus at Mount Lykaion in Greece. It may be associated with ritual activity performed there.[30][31][32]
    Fulgurites are appreciated by many for their value as tangible evidence of lightning strikes.[33] Fulgurites are also popular among hobbyists and collectors of natural specimens.[34]