Posts tagged quartz crystal
Enhydros
 
 

Sometimes a Quartz crystal will have a little pocket inside it, with liquid that moves around. You rock it side to side to watch the bubble move up and down and it is usually mesmerizing. These are often called enhydros. I call them that. Funny thing is- that’s NOT an enhydro! These are actually called fluid inclusions! An enhydro is something else altogether and I’ll get to that soon - I promise!

First, how do these liquid inclusions occur? When the Quartz crystal is forming, often from hot groundwater containing silica, there can be inconsistencies in the layers, where some parts form more quickly than others. In some cases this could cause a small pit to form. This pit, while full of water, is then sealed off when the Quartz continues to form over the pit. This leaves a pocket that is completely full of water. 

Next, as the crystal cools, so too does the liquid inside- and both contract (become smaller in volume). The water contracts more than the crystal does, so that the liquid inside the pocket becomes smaller than the pocket itself. The liquid pulls away from the walls of its pocket, forming a little vapor bubble that can move around the pocket.

Vapor bubble formed inside Quartz

Vapor bubble formed inside Quartz

Milky Quartz gets it’s white color from tons of microscopic fluid inclusions. How crazy is that?! And the liquid trapped inside a crystal isn’t always just water. When hot saltwater gets trapped inside of Quartz, the salt can crystallize into a tiny Halite crystal! Herkimer diamonds from New York often have fluid inclusions with Carbon in them, which look like black specks. Some Quartz from Pakistan have Petroleum inside them, as well as Fluorites from Elmwood, Tennessee. Liquid inclusions vary so much- and they are tiny time capsules to geologists- a pure sample of the liquids present when the crystal formed!

So what is an enhydro?

An enhydro is defined as “a hollow nodule or geode of chalcedony containing water, sometimes in large amounts.”

Therefore, liquid inside Quartz it is not a true enhydro. Chalcedony is a micro-crystalline variety of Quartz (made up of many microscopic, elongated Quartz crystals), but Quartz is not a Chalcedony. Some varieties of Chalcedony include all Agates, Onyx, and Jaspers. So since Agate is a Chalcedony, that means that Agate geodes that have water trapped in the hollow center ARE in fact, true enhydros. They are probably the only liquid inclusion I know of that do fit the true definition of an enhydro!

Another difference between the two, is that with a liquid inclusion, we talked about how the liquid is forever trapped, and unless opened up that liquid will stay the same as it was the day it was trapped, for all eternity. But in an enhydro, the stone is porous, and the water actually is able to seep in and out of the geode! So the water inside could be from the time just before it was collected, rather than the time the stone itself formed. Once collected, the water can continue to seep out, though very slowly. Some seal them to keep this from happening.

Agate Enhydro Geodes

Agate Enhydro Geodes

Now, I know that most folks already call liquid inclusions enhydros regardless of what type of rock they’re in, and that most people don’t know the difference. I’ll have to keep calling them enhydros so that people know what I’m talking about and can find them in my shop. But it’s still a fun bit of knowledge for you to have up there in your noggin! 

Time To Re-Fresh the Garden
Crystals that live in my yard

Crystals that live in my yard

All sorts of natural stones make great garden decor! They don't have to be huge to work, either. Above are a few of the crystal friends I keep between two trees in our yard. Smaller rough stones or natural clusters make great accent pieces around smaller plants or in planted containers.

Make sure your outdoor crystals are safe outside- Quartz varieties such as Amethyst, Smoky Quartz, Aventurine etc, and many other stones are safe to leave outside but some stones such as Selenite, can not get wet. (Selenite will dissolve if left outside.)

Self Healed or Re-Healed Crystals
Quartz broken from it’s place of formation

Quartz broken from it’s place of formation

Sometimes Quartz that has broken from its place of formation, through tectonic movement or extreme temperature changes, can ‘heal’ itself in the right conditions. Self healing or Re-healing is when the Quartz continues forming over the fractured section of the crystal to form new faces and terminations. Here is a Quartz crystal that has begun to heal, you can see the beginnings of the geometric crystal faces taking shape.

Quartz crystal that has begun to heal itself

Quartz crystal that has begun to heal itself

Sometimes a piece that has separated heals so well that you can’t tell where it separated at all, this is referred to as a “floater,” and many are highly prized collector’s pieces like this Smoky Quartz, which has formed many stepped, triangular terminations over its fracture.

Smoky Quartz “Floater” that has healed itself

Smoky Quartz “Floater” that has healed itself