About
Zoisite occurs in many other colors, and another well-known form is the pink, manganese-rich variety called Thulite. Another interesting variety is the deep green massive form associated with contrasting red Ruby. Zoisite was named in 1805 after Austrian scientist and naturalist Baron Sigmund Zois von Edelstein (1747-1819), who had a notable mineral collection and identified Zoisite as being a unique mineral species.
Crystal Forms & Aggregates
Other ID Marks
Striking Features
Environment
Varieties
✓ common · ✗ uncommon
- Tanzanite— Blue to purplish-blue variety of Zoisite found in the Merelani Hills in the Arusha region of Tanzania. Tanzanite is used as an important gemstone and has become enormously popular. See the gemstone Tanzanite for additional information.
- Thulite— Pink, manganese-rich variety of the Zoisite. Originally found in Norway, Thulite is named after the mythical region of Thule, which many identify as Norway. See the gemstone Thulite for additional information, and see also Clinothulite.
- Ruby Zoisite— Mixture of opaque red Ruby in a green Zoisite matrix from Tanzania. Ruby Zoisite has pretty contrast and is used as a minor gemstone.
Polymorphs
Uses
Also see the dedicated gemstone pages for Zoisite, Tanzanite, and Thulite.
Noteworthy Localities
There are only a handful of good Zoisite localities in the U.S. Pink Thulite, as well as other color forms come from the Spruce Pine District (especially Micaville), Mitchell Co., North Carolina. A massive and crudely crystallized gray and tan Zoisite comes from Conway, Franklin Co., Massachusetts; and yellowish-bronze interconnected crystals from the Nightingale District, Pershing Co., Nevada. Brown and green Zoisite crystals were known from the ores at Ducktown, Polk Co., Tennessee.
Common Mineral Associations
Distinguishing Similar Minerals
Tourmaline - Harder (7 - 7.5), has poor cleavage.
Wollastonite - Softer (4.5 - 5), usually fluorescent.
Tremolite - Exhibits cleavage in both directions, whereas Zoisite only has cleavage in one direction, usually fluorescent.
The variety Tanzanite can resemble Cordierite, and the variety Thulite can resemble Rhodonite and pink Clinozoisite (Clinothulite).
Photos
See all 16 photos →Crystal forms
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