gypsum - sand selenite rose from a dry lake near Oujda, Morocco - hand/display specimen
Selenite gypsum sand rose CaSO4 ∙ 2H2O Selenite gypsum sand roses form in seasonal desert lakes as they dry. Selenite is typically transparent, but when it crystallizes in sandy conditions it forms rosettes of flattened crystals, the rose “petals,” which are either encrusted with sand or with sand embedded throughout. The color of the gypsum crystals depends on the color of the sand in that dry lake. These Moroccan examples are particularly attractive. Unlike the white-edged desert roses you see for sale in rock shops, these are unaltered and completely natural. Since gypsum has two attached water molecules, mineral dealers cook selenite roses with a weed burner to drive off the water, turning the edges of the crystals white. They are not found like this naturally, and we prefer that students see this mineral in unaltered form. The field photo shows selenite roses from Mexico being burned to make the edges of the flattened crystals white. This is also how plaster is made. Gypsum is