Description
Detailed Description
This piece hosts a cavity lined with sharp, lustrous chabazite crystals with nice colour. There is actually a second cavity on the underside (as I would display it), containing chabazite and heulandite crystals. In excellent condition, stands perfectly for display as photographed. A nice display specimen.
Browse More Specimens from Nova Scotia’s Bay of Fundy (click here)
About the Minerals and Localities of the Bay of Fundy (click here)
About These Red Chabazites From Wasson’s Bluff
In one relatively small zone at Wasson’s Bluff, the chabazite crystals are a particular dark red hue – more intense and lighter than a brown, and most are a bit deeper and darker than a brick red or deep orange. This zone has produced sporadically over history. Most often, days of very hard work in this area yield absolutely nothing, but a few isolated finds in recent years have produced a small number of excellent pieces – these specimens are from those finds. There have been no finds from this zone since 2017.
In historic times, these particular deep-coloured chabazites from Wasson’s Bluff were known as “acadialite”, named for Acadia (which is the English for L’Acadie, the colonial-era name for this part of Canada). The name “acadialite” is sometimes still seen on older collection labels, sometimes as a species name and sometimes as a varietal name. Under current nomenclature, these specimens are known as chabazite, with “acadialite” now considered a historical synonym.