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Azurite Green Adamite Crystal Mexico Mineral Specimen Possible Ojuela Mine COA Rare Display Collectible Durango Mineral Gift

$ 95.17
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Description Azurite with Green Adamite Crystal Mineral Specimen This genuine Azurite with Green Adamite crystal specimen is a carefully chosen display piece, selected for its striking mineral contrast, collectable appeal, and interesting geological association. The specimen is possibly from the famous Ojuela Mine, Mapimí, Durango, Mexico, a locality highly regarded by mineral collectors for producing colourful secondary minerals, including azurite, adamite, legrandite, hemimorphite, mimetite, wulfenite, and other oxidised-zone specimens. The photograph shows the actual specimen you will receive, allowing you to view the individual crystal form, colour, texture, matrix, and natural mineral coverage before purchase. Full sizing can be seen in the photo. This Crystal is a genuine specimen and includes a Certificate of Authenticity lifetime guarantee generic card, making it a suitable choice for collectors, display cabinets, mineral study, geology gifts, and natural history collections. Geology, Crystal Type and Mineral Species Azurite is a copper carbonate hydroxide mineral with the chemical formula Cu3(CO3)2(OH)2. It is best known for its rich blue to deep azure colour, which forms through the natural weathering and oxidation of copper-bearing deposits. In mineral specimens, azurite may appear as small crystals, crusts, botryoidal coatings, radiating aggregates, earthy masses, or sparkling drusy areas depending on its growth conditions. Adamite is a zinc arsenate hydroxide mineral with the chemical formula Zn2AsO4OH. It is a secondary mineral that forms in the oxidised zones of zinc-rich ore deposits. Adamite can occur in a variety of colours, including yellow, honey, pale green, bright green, white, colourless, or bluish tones. Green Adamite is often associated with trace copper content, which can contribute to its attractive green colouration. The combination of blue Azurite and Green Adamite creates an appealing contrast that is especially desirable in a display mineral. Together, these minerals represent classic secondary mineral formation, where groundwater, oxygen, and changing chemical conditions interact with primary ore minerals over long geological timescales. This process can create vivid and highly collectable crystal associations, particularly in historic mining districts with complex copper, zinc, lead, and silver mineralisation. Possible Ojuela Mine, Mapimí, Durango, Mexico The Ojuela Mine in Mapimí, Durango, Mexico is one of the world’s best-known mineral localities. It is especially famous for fine specimens from the oxidised zone of a polymetallic ore deposit. The mine has produced a wide variety of colourful minerals prized by collectors, including exceptional adamite specimens and attractive copper-bearing associations. Specimens attributed to this locality are appreciated for their colour, variety, and mineralogical complexity. Azurite and Adamite are both minerals associated with oxidised ore environments, making this pairing consistent with the type of mineral diversity for which the Mapimí mining district is widely recognised. The possible Ojuela Mine provenance adds further collector interest and makes the piece suitable for anyone building a Mexican mineral collection or a display focused on copper and zinc secondary minerals. Colour, Crystal Habit and Display Features This specimen features the attractive contrast of Azurite and Green Adamite, combining blue copper mineralisation with green zinc arsenate mineral presence. Depending on the individual growth, Azurite may show deep blue patches, crystalline coatings, or fine sparkling areas, while the Green Adamite may appear as small crystals, clustered growths, granular coverage, or vivid green accents across the matrix. The natural association of these minerals gives the specimen strong visual appeal, especially for close-up viewing under good display lighting. Colour variations, surface texture, crystal coverage, matrix shape, and mineral placement are all part of the natural character of the piece. As the photo shows the actual specimen supplied, the buyer can see the exact form and appearance before ordering. Genuine Collectable Crystal with Certificate of Authenticity This Crystal is a genuine specimen and includes a Certificate of Authenticity lifetime guarantee generic card. The certificate provides reassurance that the item supplied is an authentic natural mineral specimen, carefully selected for sale as a collectable crystal and geological display piece. Azurite has a Mohs hardness of approximately 3.5 to 4, while Adamite is typically around 3.5. As with many fine mineral specimens, this piece should be handled carefully, kept dry, and displayed away from rough contact. It is best suited for indoor display in a cabinet, specimen tray, collection drawer, desk display, or natural history arrangement. Collector, Decorative and Gift Appeal Azurite with Green Adamite is a desirable combination for collectors who appreciate colourful secondary minerals, copper and zinc ore minerals, Mexican mineral specimens, and unusual crystal associations. Its possible Ojuela Mine origin, natural colour contrast, and genuine specimen status make it an attractive addition to a mineral cabinet or geology collection. This specimen is ideal for crystal collectors, mineral enthusiasts, geology students, natural history displays, educational collections, decorative interiors, and gift buyers looking for a genuine natural specimen with strong visual interest and recognised mineralogical value.