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Description
Esperite is a rare mineral, but was found locally
in the north end of the Franklin mine in masses of at least many kilograms weight. It is
known only from Franklin and in minute amounts from a mine in Bolivia.
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Daylight view |
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Esperite and
willemite. Fluorescing yellow and green, respectively, under short-wave UV. Franklin, NJ.
Width 16 cm.
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Esperite is brilliantly fluorescent yellow under
short-wave ultraviolet light, in some cases it is even more brilliant than the often
associated willemite. Much esperite appears to have replaced other primary minerals,
such as hardystonite, and these specimens often provide complex textures of several
fluorescent minerals, making some of the most striking fluorescent specimens known. Good
specimens are prized. |
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Daylight view
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Esperite, willemite,
calcite. Fluorescing yellow, green, and red, respectively, with under short-wave UV.
Franklin, NJ. Width 4 cm.
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Daylight view
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Esperite and
willemite. Fluorescing yellow and green, respectively, under short-wave UV. Sawn surface.
Franklin, NJ. Width 10 cm.
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Daylight view
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Esperite and
willemite. Fluorescing yellow and green, respectively, under short-wave UV. Esperite here
occupies fractures in a mixture of franklinite/garnet. Franklin, NJ. Width 4 cm.
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Be sure to visit the photo
page taken under shortwave ultraviolet light. For more
information on esperite, see Dunn
(1995). |
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