Crystal Caves In Chihuahua

Crystal Caves In Chihuahua 3,4/5 2365 votes

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On My 7 year old son has started to pick up rocks and collect them as tresures I was the same way when I was small and I got to the point i started to buy polished stones when I got older I’m gonna start geting my son polished rocks but i have found on this siteSelenite Lamp that are Approx. 6-8 pounds in weight that thay are asking $68 each i’m however afraid that the Selenite is not real for this price I was wondering from someone who knows what thay are and what thay look like if it is posable that the stone is real and not just glass.

The crystals took ages to grow into gigantic sizes. The present size of the gypsum selenite crystals was formed due to the hydrothermal fluids emanating from the underground magma chambers, several years ago. For millions of years, groundwater saturated with calcium sulfate, filtered through the caves at Naica, and then warmed by the tremendous heat from the magma below. As the magma cooled, water temperature inside the caves slowly stabilized at about 136°F. At that ideal temperature minerals mixed in the water started the process of converting themselves to selenite, molecules of which were laid down like small pieces of bricks to form crystals.

Naica: The Crystal Cave of Giants The Naica Mine of Chihuahua had been worked for centuries before two miners, following a seam of silver, broke into a vast subterranean cavern. What they found there made them stop in their tracks. Within days, an iron door was installed to protect the entrance. They had uncovered a true wonder of Mexico.

Over the course of at least 500,000 years, the selenites (hydrated sulfate gypsum) crystallized at an extremely slow rate, forming the huge crystals found today. Though it may seem ridiculous, the size of the crystals has no limit and given enough time will grow to even larger proportions. Inside the cave, there are towering crystals looking like glittering beams, lots of fallen obelisks and pillars of unearthly light.

Clusters of smaller crystals are abundant on the floor and walls, which are sharp as blades and flawlessly transparent. However, with air temperatures that reach up to 58°C and humidity that ranges from 90 to 100 percent, getting inside the cave is definitely not very amusing. The scientists and the researchers are, therefore, required to wear special cooling suits along with an oxygen supply and even then, can spend no longer than 30-45 minutes within the cave.