Beryl: Difference between revisions
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* π© '''Green form of beryl is the widely known emerald.''' | * π© '''Green form of beryl is the widely known emerald.''' | ||
* π¦ '''Blue for is widely known aquamarine.''' | |||
* π¨toπ§ Yellow to orange: heliodor (or "golden beryl") | |||
* π§toπͺ orange to pink: morganite. | |||
* π₯ red: just "red beryl" | |||
* β¬οΈ colorless form: goshenite | |||
== Related == | == Related == | ||
* [[Bromellite]]: BeO, | * [[Bromellite]]: BeO, Mohs 9, hexagonal Β | ||
* [[Topaz]] β¦ another unusually hard widely known silicate but avoiding elemental scarcity | * [[Topaz]] Mohs 8 (defining mineral) β¦ another unusually hard widely known silicate but avoiding elemental scarcity | ||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beryl | * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beryl | ||
[[Category:Gemstones with color based names]] | |||
Latest revision as of 10:58, 5 September 2025
A hard beryllium aluminum silicate.
Beryllium is rare so usefulness as structural material is limited.
Al2Be3[Si6O18], hexagonal, Mohs 7.5 to 8.0
- π© Green form of beryl is the widely known emerald.
- π¦ Blue for is widely known aquamarine.
- π¨toπ§ Yellow to orange: heliodor (or "golden beryl")
- π§toπͺ orange to pink: morganite.
- π₯ red: just "red beryl"
- β¬οΈ colorless form: goshenite
Related
- Bromellite: BeO, Mohs 9, hexagonal
- Topaz Mohs 8 (defining mineral) β¦ another unusually hard widely known silicate but avoiding elemental scarcity