Welcome
to Pyramidia -- Online
information repository
for the pseudomorph
known variously as Pyramidite,
Glendonite, Thinolite, Gennoishi
and others (see below). All
of these are calcite pseudomorphs
after ikaite. The website
Pyramidia is operated by Leo
Scarpelli, a person who seems
to be completely obssessed
with calcite pseudomorphs
after ikaite.
Ikaite
incorporates water molecules while crystallizing, and can only form in very
cold temperatures. When
the matrix, usually a silaceous mud, encasing the ikaite crystals warms,
as a result of ground movement or climate change, the Ikaite crystals collapse
back into an aqueous solution, which then over time re-crystallizes as calcite,
filling the void left by the collapsed Ikaite and reproducing its form pseudomorphically.
Cool huh!
Ikaites
and the pseudomorphs replacing them are currently of intense interest to
climatologists and other climate researchers, as the crystals reveal information
about environmental conditions during their formation. By understanding
what the climate has done in the past, scientists are better able to comprehend
current conditions. Thus, calcite pseudomorphs after ikaite are quite useful,
and their value to science will likely increase as climate change continues
to reshape our environment.
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The replacement
pseudomorphs of Ikaite are named
according to their locations, as follows: |
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Glendonite |
Glendon, New South
Wales, Australia |
Thinolite |
SW USA - [Greek,
"thinos" = shore] |
Jarrowite |
Jarrow, United Kingdom |
Fundylite |
Bay of Fundy, Canada |
Genno-ishi |
Niigata Prefecture,
Japan - [ = "hammerstone"] |
Gersternkorner
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German = barley-corn |
Molekryds |
Mors Island, Denmark
- [ = "Mole Cross"] |
Pyramidite |
Olympic Peninsula,
North America |
White
Sea Hornets |
Olenitsa River, White
Sea Coast, Karelia, Russia |
Ciao
amici italiani mio! Cerchiamo di pietre scambi!
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