Diaspore , also known as
diasporite,
empholite,
kayserite, or
tanatarite, is an
aluminium oxide hydroxide mineral, a-AlO(OH), crystallizing in the
orthorhombic system and
isomorphous with
goethite. It occurs sometimes as flattened crystals, but usually as lamellar or scaly masses, the flattened surface being a direction of perfect cleavage on which the
lustre is markedly pearly in character. It is colorless or greyish-white, yellowish, sometimes violet in color, and varies from translucent to transparent. It may be readily distinguished from other colorless transparent minerals with a perfect cleavage and pearly luster—like
mica,
talc,
brucite, and
gypsum— by its greater hardness of 6.5 - 7. The specific gravity is 3.4. When heated before the blowpipe it
decrepitates violently, breaking up into white pearly scales. The mineral occurs as an alteration product of
corundum or
emery and is found in granular
limestone and other crystalline rocks. Well-developed crystals are found in the emery deposits of the
Urals and at Chester,
Massachusetts, and in
kaolin at Schemnitz in
Hungary. If obtainable in large quantity, it would be of economic importance as a source of
aluminium.