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Shattuckite

Shattuckite • copper silicate hydroxide Formula: Cu5(SiO3)4(OH)2 • Crystal system: Orthorhombic Mohs ~3.5 • SG ~3.8–4.1 • Luster: silky to dull; vitreous when encased in quartz Habit: fibrous, felted masses, spherulites; coatings in the oxidation zone of Cu deposits Type locality: Shattuck Mine, Bisbee, Arizona

Shattuckite — Azure Velour from the Copper Country

Shattuckite looks like someone painted velvet with the sky: deep azure to blue‑green, usually in soft, fibrous masses that polish to a gentle sheen. It’s a secondary copper mineral—born where copper deposits meet oxygen and time—often mingling with chrysocolla, malachite, and quartz in painterly swirls. When quartz floods the mix, you get the prized “shattuckite‑in‑quartz,” a wearable slice of blue stormcloud. (Forecast: 100% chance of compliments.)

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What it is
A copper silicate hydroxide forming fibrous, velvety crusts and rosettes in the oxidized zones of copper deposits
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Why it captivates
Saturated azure‑blue color; distinctive fibrous texture; spectacular when silicified inside quartz
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Care snapshot
Soft & porous (Mohs ~3.5): avoid acids, ultrasonics & rough wear; quartz‑hosted material is much sturdier

Identity & Naming 🔎

Named for a mine, loved for its blue

Shattuckite takes its name from the Shattuck Mine in Bisbee, Arizona, where it was first described. As a secondary copper mineral, it forms after primary ores (like chalcopyrite or bornite) oxidize near the surface. The result: beautiful, blue coatings and masses that seem almost textile‑like when polished.

What it isn’t

Shattuckite is not the same as chrysocolla (also a blue‑green copper silicate, but typically more earthy/gel‑like) or plancheite (a harder, fibrous copper silicate). They happily intermingle, which is part of the visual magic—and occasionally the identification headache.

Rule of thumb: if the blue looks like fine velour or felt with tiny fibers under magnification, shattuckite is a strong candidate—especially when partnered with quartz and malachite.

Where It Forms 🧭

Oxidation‑zone specialist

Shattuckite grows where copper sulfides weather in the presence of silica‑bearing fluids. It lines fractures, vugs, and breccia cavities as fibrous crusts or spherical aggregates.

Silica’s helping hand

Silica‑rich fluids can permeate the blue masses, turning them into shattuckite‑in‑quartz. The quartz “locks” the color and strengthens the stone—great news for lapidaries and jewelry wearers.

Pseudomorph stories

In some deposits, shattuckite may replace earlier copper minerals while preserving their shapes (pseudomorphs)—a mineralogical cosplay that collectors adore.

Recipe: copper + oxygen + silica + time = sky‑blue velvet on stone.

Palette & Pattern Vocabulary 🎨

Palette

  • Azure to indigo blue — classic, saturated shattuckite.
  • Blue‑green — where chemistry shifts or partners (chrysocolla) join in.
  • Malachite greens — common companions in tapestries and bands.
  • Quartz white/grey — silicified areas that add strength and sparkle.

Expect soft, fibrous texture in massive pieces; when in quartz, the surface reads glassy with blue “clouds” below.

Pattern words

  • Velour fields — even blue, felted texture that buffs to satin.
  • Tapestry — interwoven shattuckite–chrysocolla–malachite patchwork.
  • Cloudlace in quartz — floating blue wisps and nets locked under clear silica.
  • Rosettes — radial sprays that can show a touch of silky chatoyance.

Photo tip: Raking light (~25–30°) reveals the fibrous nap; a second soft fill light keeps the blues from going too inky on camera.


Physical & Optical Details 🧪

Property Typical Range / Note
Chemistry Cu5(SiO3)4(OH)2 — copper silicate hydroxide
Crystal system Orthorhombic; crystals are rare—most material is fibrous/massive
Hardness (Mohs) ~3.5 (soft; easily abraded if not silicified)
Specific gravity ~3.8–4.1 (surprisingly hefty for a “blue chalk” look)
Cleavage / Fracture Indistinct; splintery to uneven fracture in fibrous masses
Luster Silky to dull on fibers; vitreous when seen through quartz
Transparency Opaque to translucent in thin fibers
Associates Chrysocolla, malachite, azurite, cuprite, tenorite, quartz; occasionally plancheite/dioptase nearby
Tenacity Fragile in loose fibers; solid when well silicified or stabilized
Treatments Porous material may be stabilized with resin/wax; shattuckite‑in‑quartz is usually untreated
Wearability in one line: set the soft, porous stuff high and gentle; set the quartz‑locked blue anywhere you like.

Under the Loupe 🔬

Fibrous “nap”

At 10×, look for minute fibers and felted textures. Radial rosettes appear as tiny fans; aligned fibers can give a subtle silky sheen when you tilt the stone.

Quartz host clues

In shattuckite‑in‑quartz, the blue sits below a glassy surface with healed fractures and tiny reflective planes—proof that silica did the heavy lifting.

Separating the blues

Chrysocolla tends to be more earthy and patchy; plancheite forms coarser radial sprays and is typically harder. When intergrown, lab tests (Raman) are the final referee; visually, the velour‑fine nap points to shattuckite.


Look‑Alikes & Mix‑ups 🕵️

Chrysocolla

Similar palette but generally softer (2–4) and more porous/earthy. In quartz, both look crisp—color hue and texture become the clues.

Plancheite

Blue, fibrous copper silicate too, but tends to show broom‑like radial sprays and is noticeably harder. Often intermixed with shattuckite in Copperbelt assemblages.

Azurite / Ajoite / Hemimorphite

Azurite is deeper royal blue with crystalline sparkle; ajoite‑in‑quartz skews greener/teal with phantom‑like wisps; hemimorphite can be robin‑egg blue but has different heft and chemistry.

Turquoise

Harder, waxy luster, and different structure; turquoise rarely forms the velour‑fine fibrous masses typical of shattuckite.

Glass & dyes

Dyed materials often show too‑even color and pooling along cracks. Shattuckite’s blue is in the fibers, not just at the surface.

Quick checklist

  • Velvety blue with fine fibers at 10×?
  • Heftier than chalk (SG near 4)?
  • Glassy surface because the blue sits in quartz? → very wearable.

Localities & Collecting Notes 📍

Classic sources

Bisbee, Arizona (type), the Kaokoveld of northern Namibia (famous shattuckite‑in‑quartz), Tsumeb (Namibia), and parts of the Katanga Copperbelt (DRC) are well‑known. Smaller finds pop up anywhere copper meets silica and weather.

How it’s sold

As cabochons, beads, tumbled stones, and scenic slabs. Stabilized material exists for uniform polish; the premium pieces are the naturally silicified blues sealed in quartz.

Labeling idea: “Shattuckite — Cu silicate (often with chrysocolla/malachite) — note if in quartz or stabilized.” It answers the three most common questions at a glance.

Care & Lapidary Notes 🧼💎

Everyday care

  • Clean with lukewarm water + mild soap; soft cloth; dry promptly.
  • Avoid acids, harsh cleaners, and prolonged soaking (porous!).
  • Skip ultrasonics/steam; store away from harder gems to protect the surface.

Jewelry guidance

  • Best as pendants & earrings. For rings/bracelets, favor bezel settings and mindful wear—unless the blue is locked in quartz.
  • White metals brighten blues; yellow metals create a Mediterranean sea vibe.
  • For composites (with chrysocolla/malachite), design around hardness contrasts.

On the wheel

  • Work cool and gentle. Pre‑polish 600→1200→3k; avoid heavy pressure (fibers can undercut).
  • Finish with alumina or cerium on a soft pad; a microcrystalline wax can add stain resistance.
  • Silicified material takes a crisp, glassy finish—treat it like quartz and let the blue glow from beneath.
Display tip: Place a shattuckite cab beside a shattuckite‑in‑quartz cab. Same chemistry, different architecture—instant “aha” about durability and look.

Hands‑On Demos 🔍

Loupe the nap

Under 10×, hunt for the velour‑fine fibers. Rotate under raking light—some rosettes flash a gentle, silky shimmer.

Backlight the quartz

For shattuckite‑in‑quartz, put a light behind the cab. The blue floats as clouds and nets within the clear host—tiny weather systems in stone.

Small joke: shattuckite—because sometimes the sky decides to wear velvet.

Questions ❓

Is shattuckite the same as chrysocolla?
No. Both are copper silicates, but they differ in structure and texture. They often grow together, which is why “tapestry” slabs are so mesmerizing.

Why is some shattuckite great for rings and some isn’t?
Loose, porous material is soft (Mohs ~3.5). If the blue is encased in quartz, the surface you touch is quartz (Mohs 7), so it wears like quartz.

Does it need stabilization?
Sometimes. Porous pieces may be resin‑stabilized to improve polish and durability; high‑quality shattuckite‑in‑quartz typically needs none.

Any special storage?
Keep it separate from harder gems and away from household chemicals. A soft pouch keeps that velvety surface happy.

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