strange…nearly perfect hexagon in ruby…can this be natural or any ancient coin…wondering if any one can help
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strange…nearly perfect hexagon in ruby…can this be natural or any ancient coin…wondering if any one can help
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Reported for forum change.
It’s a natural ruby crystal.
Yes the hexagon shape can be natural. That is how crystals work. And I’ve never heard of crystals cut into discs as coinage.
That’s not nearly good enough to be artificial.
its size is 3/4 of an inch.
If you google ‘natural ruby crystal’, it’s clear that hexagonal columns of ruby crystal are normal - the same search also returns information on the lattice structure, which appears to indicate cleavage planes that would result in flat, hexagonal pieces such as this.
So it’s a natural hexagonal ruby crystal - the formation as a flat piece may be the result of natural processes, or it may be that someone has cut it that way.
I think it’s been cut, you can see the marks that run across the natural crystal growth planes. I wouldn’t even call that ruby, it’s not saturated enough and anyway is hardly gem-quality., I’d just go with corundum. That particular form factor isn’t unusual. At all.
Mangetout, those aren’t cleavage planes, ruby doesn’t have cleavage. It does exhibit parting, but that’s not quite the same thing.
That’s quite a nice specimen, though - very nice zoned crystal growth.
Cleavage planes are my favorite form of transportation.
its all natural…its not cut
If you know it’s all natural, what was the point of the OP, then?
Looking up the definitions of parting vs cleavage planes - I think I actually meant parting all along. There are natural processes that could break off a slice of the hexagonal column like this - a rock slide could do it if doesn’t need to work perfectly every time.
i meant to say it is not modified or cut but the shape, size and design made me post the query
I don’t dispute that it’s naturally hexagonal, but I think it’s possible this is an artificial slice of a natural crystal column.