GALLERY.] NATURAL HISTORY. 169 
lite (so called from Val Tremola, where, however, it is 
not found), among the specimens of which are the fine, 
fibrous varieties, resembling asbest; the glassy tremolite, 
in dolomite and granular limestone, &c.— Arjvedsonitc — 
Anthophyllite . 
Case 34. Part of this Case is filled with the mineral 
substances called asbestine, many of which appear to pass 
into some of the varieties of amphibole in the preceding 
glass Case. Among these may be observed specimens illus¬ 
trative of the transition from a very close to a loose-fibrous 
structure;—several varieties of the flexible asbest or 
amianth , with some antique incombustible cloth, paper, 
&c., made of it;—the varieties called common andschiller- 
asbest, mountain wood, mountain cork, or nectic asbest, 
&c., separate, and in combination with other substances; 
—the blue and yellow asbest from South Africa, to which 
the name of krokydalite has been given. The remainder of 
this Case contains pyroxenic minerals:— augite , in separate 
crystals, and imbedded in lava from Vesuvius, together with 
groups of well-defined crystals from Arendahl in Norway, 
where this substance occurs in primitive rocks ;—the jef- 
fersonite ; —the granular variety called coccolite ;—the va¬ 
rieties of diopside , at first considered as a distinct species, 
including the mussite and alalite from Piedmont;—the 
sahlite or malacolite, to which also belongs the baikalite, of 
which a few fine specimens are here deposited; the pyrgome 
or fassaite, and the achmite . The metalloid diallage or 
diallagite, also called schiller-spar, from the Hartz, Salz¬ 
burg, &c., the bronzite and the hypersthene or paulite (La¬ 
brador hornblende of Werner), may likewise be referred 
to this tribe of minerals. 
Case 35. Among its contents may be specified the 
mineral substances which have been described under the 
appellations of thallite, arendalite, acanticone, delphinite, 
&c.; most of these are Werner’s pistaciie and are now more 
generally designated by the name of epidote, given to them 
by Haiiy. To this also belongs the manganesiferous epi¬ 
dote, considered by some as an ore of manganese.— Camming - 
tonite .— Zoisite. —Among the specimens of idocrase (vesu- 
vian of Werner), the more conspicuous are the large beau¬ 
tiful crystals (the unibinaire of Haiiy), discovered by 
Laxmann on the banks of the Vilui in Kamschatka, em» 
