File:Beryl-Quartz-Spodumene-ed14b.jpg

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Description
English: Beryl, Quartz, Spodumene
Locality: Konar Valley (Kunar Valley), Konar (Kunar; Konarh; Konarha; Nuristan) Province, Afghanistan (Locality at mindat.org)
Size: large cabinet, 26 x 17 x 13 cm
Kunzite with Morganite and Quartz
When I was first offered this specimen via email from a source in Peshawar, who said it had just been hauled in from Afghainstan, I passed on it. I thought it must be a glued-together fake, and a pretty bad fake at that since it was so obvious this could not be real. Unrepaired and a pristine floater complete all around?! HAH! (In fact, I was a little upset my source had the poor judgment to pass on to me such an obvious fake.) I have since been proven wrong, as I found when another foreign source bought the piece and put it in front of me here in the US, trusting I would freak out over it. It is real, it is unrepaired despite its intricate geometry and sheer size (nearly a foot tall!); and it is pristine and undamaged all around as advertised. Oh yes, and it is a floater! The morganite measures 8 x 8 x 3.25 cm and is the size of a hockey puck and as symmetrical as a crystal model. It is PERFECT, as if it were carved from pink ice. The color is a classic pink, not peachy-orange. The contrast of the pastel pink morganite and its sharp hexagonal form to the crazily tilting vertical spray of intense pink kunzites is, obviously, quite startling and exciting to see. It is one of the most 3-dimensional mineral specimens I could imagine and I feel privileged to offer this all-too-real miracle of survival. I was told recently by another dealer that they were offered the specimen in Peshawar when visiting (this was in 2007) but through an intermediary, and at a much higher price. My suspicion is that it did not sell simply because any buyer would have had to be suspicious of its reality - which I have thoroughly checked now in a modern prep lab to be sure of. This is a world class gem pegmatite combination specimen. Note that in normal lighting the photos below are more accurate. The first photo was taken by Joe Budd using stronger, studio lighting.
Deutsch: Beryll, Quarz, Spodumen
Fundort: Konar Valley (Kunar Valley), Kunar, Afghanistan (Fundort bei mindat.org)
Größe: 26 x 17 x 13 cm
Date before March 2010
date QS:P,+2010-03-00T00:00:00Z/7,P1326,+2010-03-00T00:00:00Z/10
Source Image: http://www.irocks.com/db_pics/new09mix/ed14b.jpg, Description: http://www.irocks.com/render.html?species=Spodumene&page=14
Author
Robert M. Lavinsky  (1972–)  wikidata:Q56247090
 
Alternative names
Robert Matthew Lavinsky; Lavinsky, Robert M.; Lavinsky R M
Description American mineral collector and mineral dealer
iRocks.com (Mineralogical Record)
Date of birth 13 December 1972 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth Columbus Edit this at Wikidata
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creator QS:P170,Q56247090
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Rob Lavinsky, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publishes it under the following license:
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Attribution: Rob Lavinsky, iRocks.com – CC-BY-SA-3.0
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current12:33, 28 May 2010Thumbnail for version as of 12:33, 28 May 20101,096 × 1,800 (1.1 MB)RKBot (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |Description= {{en|1=Beryl, Quartz, Spodumene :: Locality: Konar Valley (Kunar Valley), Konar (Kunar; Konarh; Konarha; Nuristan) Province, A

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