Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Sagenite

A rock that insists on telling you a story is a great rock to get to know!

Sagenite loves to tell stories. At least the kind I work with in my lapidary shop does. There are apparently two schools of thought when this name is used to describe a rock. There's the one that describes stones with vibrant, puffy strands that appear to be moving with an unseen tide. I absolutely love these. The other is a variety of rutile  where the crystals criss-cross  in a geometric sort of pattern. The look is so distinctive that back in 1796, it was named sagenite  from the Greek and Latin word "sagena" or net.

This is a link to a picture of the criss-cross pattern. https://goo.gl/images/m2aBpA

As a professional writer, I'm leery of copying someone's image for my use, like this blog, without permissions. This image appears on a site that says the images are royalty free, but then has a notice to check for copyright. I decided a link was the best way to go.


 I fell in love with the slab I used to create this cabochon!  It has the yellowish sagenite, along with white tube structures you can just see inside the clear agate, and a vug that comes across as a whirlpool that is causing the sagenite to swirl around.

Pat McMahan, renowned agate expert, wrote that these sagenetic filaments are often arranged in fans or sunbursts in the agates and can come in different colors. That is because the sagenite in agates is a pseudomorph (where one mineral replaces a different one that has already created the shape). As an interesting aside, he feels that the sagenetic structures form in the still-hardening agate and they don't extend into nearby banded agate which is formed at a different time.


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This cool piece of sagentic agate really shows off the way the filaments can arrange themselves in groups of fans.

The way it has a central open space in the agate with the filaments swishing around it, makes me think of that sight you see when you're in your car as it goes through the automatic car wash. All those soft things rotating and slapping your car as you go through.


The vendor who sold me this had a lot of slabs of this material. I asked him what it was and he wrote "sagenite" on the slab I purchased.

I've had other people who have seen it agree that it is sagenite, but it's different from my other pieces because there's no cluster that the formations spring from.

However, I love the look like it's from a pot of spaghetti and it polishes like a dream!





 Do you have a favorite agate cabochon that features sagenite?  I'd love to see a picture of it!

ROCK SHOW SEASON IS ON!

If you have a favorite club-based rock show, drop me a note and tell me why it's wonderful and maybe I can use it in a future blog!

Until next time, have fun with your rocks!

Your Lapidary Whisperer

Donna

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