Bismuth is an uncommon mineral composed of the element of the same name. Its rarity is about the same as Silver. It usually forms in ugly masses, though occasionally does form in aesthetic lustrous crystals. Bismuth has a metallic-white color with a slight reddish or pinkish hue. This pure color will only be present on an untarnished (i.e. freshly broken) surface, since Bismuth tarnishes yellow to dark-gray.
Most marketed Bismuth specimens are laboratory grown, and exhibit a very interesting shape. They have hopper-like growths in pseudocubic crystals, and are usually coated with chemicals to prevent tarnish, thus maintaining the silver-white color. Sometimes the coating gives a colorful effect on the bismuth. These artificial crystals are widely available to collectors, and are sometimes not labelled as being lab grown. It is safe to assume that any hopper-shaped crystal with a fine luster and no tarnish is laboratory-grown.
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Crystal Forms & Aggregates
Other ID Marks
2) Crystals often striated on cleaved surfaces.
Complex Tests
Striking Features
Environment
Uses
Bismuth has a unique property where it expands while it solidifies, unlike other matter which contracts. (This same property is exhibited in water). This unique property, and the fact that it is highly diamagnetic, offer it numerous uses in the electronics field.
