Eilat Stone
A material that is NOT an approved mineral species
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About Eilat Stone
Name:
Named for the locality Eilat, Israel
A Mixture Of:
Eilat Stone is the name for a green-blue inhomogeneous mixture of several secondary copper minerals including malachite, azurite, turquoise, pseudomalachite, chrysocolla and others. The Eilat stone is the National stone of Israel, and is also known as the King Solomon Stone. (Caveat emptor: The blue and green stones sold in tourist souvenir shops are generally imported from foreign copper mines, and are not really from Israel, which is of little importance to the tourists but has to be considered by serious mineral collectors.)
Visit gemdat.org for gemological information about Eilat Stone.
Unique Identifiers
Mindat ID:
29162
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:1:29162:6
GUID
(UUID V4):
(UUID V4):
47e47d70-2d7b-4de7-a951-fdf7d3b1c860
Synonyms of Eilat Stone
Other Language Names for Eilat Stone
German:Eilatstein
Other Information
Health Risks:
No information on health risks for this material has been entered into the database. You should always treat mineral specimens with care.
Internet Links for Eilat Stone
mindat.org URL:
https://www.mindat.org/min-29162.html
Please feel free to link to this page.
Please feel free to link to this page.
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References for Eilat Stone
Reference List:
Localities for Eilat Stone
Locality List
- This locality has map coordinates listed.
- This locality has estimated coordinates.
ⓘ - Click for references and further information on this occurrence.
? - Indicates mineral may be doubtful at this locality.
- Good crystals or important locality for species.
- World class for species or very significant.
(TL) - Type Locality for a valid mineral species.
(FRL) - First Recorded Locality for everything else (eg varieties).
Struck out - Mineral was erroneously reported from this locality.
Faded * - Never found at this locality but inferred to have existed at some point in the past (e.g. from pseudomorphs).
All localities listed without proper references should be considered as questionable.
All localities listed without proper references should be considered as questionable.
Israel | |
| www.cst.cmich.edu (n.d.) |
Mohsen Manutchehr-Danai (2000) |
King Solomon Mine, Timna Valley, Eilat, Southern District, Israel