GALLERY.] 
natural history. (Minerals.) 
51 
hyalite , a mineral related equally to stalagmitic quartz and opal;—the 
avanturino quartz , &c. 
Case 22 contains some more of the varieties of common quartz: 
prase, which appears to be an intimate mixture of that substance and 
actinolite;—as also some varieties of the cat's eye (mostly from Cey¬ 
lon), in which the chatoyant lustre is generally produced by nearly 
invisible fibres of amianth lodged in the quartzy mass. — Part of this 
Case is occupied by the siliceous substance called hornstonc, divided 
into the conchoidal and splintery varieties, or chert; among these are 
the remarkable pseudomorphous crystals from Schneeberg in Saxony, 
derived from various modifications of calcareous spar; also beautiful 
specimens of wood converted into hornstone, being the wood-stone 
of Werner; hornstone balls from Haunstadt in Bavaria—Of flint , a 
well-known mineral substance, some interesting varieties are deposited; 
fine groups of stalactitical flint passing into calcedony; flint nodules 
containing water, Sec. The haytorite , a pseudomorphous substance, 
being purely siliceous, but presenting the form of datolite. 
The remainder of the contents of this and the whole of those of the 
following Case relate to calcedonic substances. Among the specimens 
of common calcedony the most remarkable are, the smalt-blue variety 
from Felsobanya in Transylvania, crystallized in obtuse rhombohedrons ; 
the branched and stalactical calcedony from Iceland; the splendid speci¬ 
mens from Cornwall, especially from Trevascus mine, &c.; the botry- 
oidal, from Feroe; the large hollow geodes from Oberstein; nodules, 
enclosing water (enhydrites), from Monte Berico, near Vicenza, where 
they occur in volcanic rocks, &c. 
Case 23. Calcedonic substances continued: cut and polished pieces 
of calcedony with red and black dendritic and other figures, called 
mocha-stones; varieties with white, brown, and black, straight or 
curved lines, some of which were probably among the substances of 
which the costly vasa murrhina of the ancients were made; red and 
yellowish varieties of calcedony called carnelian _ Plasma Heliotrope , 
an intimate mixture of calcedony and green earth, which, when con¬ 
taining disseminated particles of red jasper, is commonly termed blood¬ 
stone. —The beautiful and much esteemed variety of calcedony called 
chrysoprase, hitherto only found at Kosemiitz in Silesia, and which 
owes its colour to oxide of nickel, as does the green siliceous earthy 
substance, named pimelite, which accompanies it. To these are added 
specimens of some varieties of the siliceous compounds called agates , 
in which calcedony, carnelian, amethyst, and heliotrope generally form 
the predominant ingredients, combined in straight, or more or less 
curved and concentric or zigzag delicate lines, imitating coloured de¬ 
signs of fortifications, &c.: among these may be particularized the beau¬ 
tiful agate-nodule from the trap formation of Central Asia, presented 
by C. Fraser, Esq. 
Case 24. One half of this Case is occupied by the different 
varieties of jasper, such as they are enumerated by Werner, viz. the 
globular or Egyptian jasper , found chiefly near Cairo, in rounded 
pieces, which do not ow r e their form to rolling, but are probably of 
organic origin: when cut and polished they exhibit various fanciful 
delineations (one of the specimens in the table represents on its 
fractural surface the likeness of Chaucer the poet);—the riband-jasper 
or striped jasper, the finest varieties of which are found in Siberia;—the 
