Green Quartz?

Amber111

Greenie
Jul 6, 2019
18
23
Northern California
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
These green parts are found often in the white quartz. I’ve heard green Quartz is rare so not sure that’s what it is. Thank you! DAC39DBD-1A06-4337-91EF-F9B388D4513F.jpeg 8CA33BD0-4E33-4553-9CEA-9FC9B6426C6B.jpeg E092F542-3CB4-41AF-B92B-CF7D658FDB51.jpeg 9BD11167-4400-4B78-B463-A9F247BAB564.jpeg 289B3797-1122-44B5-ADE8-D7782B9ABDC2.jpeg
 

Steve1236

Hero Member
Sep 14, 2017
702
971
Az
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I'm thinking that might be epidote but I can't tell, scrub one clean and take a picture outside in sunlight and I might be able to help you better.
Steve.
 

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Steve1236

Hero Member
Sep 14, 2017
702
971
Az
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
For cleaning rocks I use super iron out, you can get it at Walmart, it works really well, scrub your specimens as clean as you can get them with a brush, something with stiff bristles, even power wash them if you can, hose works fine if you get a good nosal, stick your specimens in a container or bucket, fill the water a couple inches higher than your stones, use about a cap or two worth of SIO, depending on how much your cleaning at a time, let them soak for a day or two then stick them in fresh water changing the water daily for twice the time it was in SIO. Please make sure to wear safety goggles and long rubber gloves, stuff isn't near as bad as acids but still dont want to get it in your eyes or on your skin.
 

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stdenis_jd

Hero Member
May 7, 2015
513
576
West Lower Peninsula, MI
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
There are several things that could make quartz green - fuchsite (aventurine), epidote, hedenbergite, or chlorite inclusions, nickel (chrysoprase), chromium (mtorolite), and probably a few others I can't think of.

Yours looks like quartz colored by inclusion, I would say either epidote or chlorite.
 

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