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Earth's Rarest Mineral is Only Found Here, And It's Beautiful
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The mineral is monoclinic, which means its crystal system comes in the form of a parallelogram prism. It has a white streak. That means when you scrape it across an unglazed tile, the streak it leaves behind is white. Gemologists use the streak of a mineral to help identify it, for a mineral can have many colors, like sapphire, but the color of its streak remains constant.
Kyawthuite is a transparent mineral and has a luster like a diamond. Unlike diamond, which is the hardest substance known, kyawthuite only ranks 5.5 on the Mohs hardness scale. It’s brittle and has a conchoidal fracture. This means that when you break it, the pieces resemble a seashell. It’s also incredibly dense thanks to the bismuth it contains. It is eight times as dense as water and sinks when it’s put in water.
Interestingly, people who were looking for sapphires found this mineral in an alluvial stream. However, kyawthuite isn’t related to sapphires, which is a form of corundum that can come in every color but red.
The International Mineralogical Association recognized kyawthuite as a new mineral in 2015, and you can find the faceted gemstone in Los Angeles County’s Natural History Museum. Kyawthuite was named in honor of geologist Dr. Kyaw Thu of Yangon University.
In 1954 Pain gave the crystals to the British Museum to investigate them further. When scientists discovered the crystals represented a new type of mineral, they named it after Pain. It took until 1979 until another painite specimen was found, and it took until 2001 before yet another one was unearthed.
Because it’s so rare, Painite costs more per carat than even a rare colored diamond. A single carat of a painite specimen can cost from $50,000 to $60,000.
Though it often looks like ruby, painite is not closely related to it. Ruby is the red type of corundum, the second hardest substance on earth. Painite is a borate with the chemical formula CaZrAl9O15(BO3) with just enough vanadium and chromium to give it its reddish color. What makes painite so rare is that two of the elements that make it up, zircon and boron, are rarely found together in nature. Scientists don’t quite know why this is.
At 7.5 to 8 on the Mohs hardness scale, painite is much harder than kyawthuite. It is transparent and sports a glassy, or vitreous luster. It also differs from kyawthuite in that it has a red streak.
Besides painite and kyawthuite, Mogok is also famous for its sapphires and semi-precious gems such as garnet, peridot, and spinel. The town is also known for pegmatites, which are igneous rocks that contain crystals. Some of these crystals are gemstones, though pegmatites also contain important elements such as lithium, tin, boron, and uranium.
Geologists believe that the intense heat, pressure, and hot fluids that occurred during the formation of the Himalayan Mountains led to the creation and abundance of the precious and semi-precious gemstones and minerals in Mogok.
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