kyanite - black kyanite in a spray of fine crystals, from São José de Safira, Minas Gerais, Brazil - hand specimen
kyanite Al2SiO5 Kyanite forms when aluminum-rich rocks are metamorphosed, and is frequently found in schists that formed at medium to high pressures and lower temperatures in areas of regional metamorphism. At higher temperatures, kyanite converts to sillimanite. This kyanite was mined in the vicinity of the town of São José de Safira, Minas Gerais State, southeastern Brazil, a famous locality for this material. It is a polymorph of sillimanite and andalusite, sharing composition but differing in crystal structure. The geologic setting at São José de Safira is a schist belt 30 km wide and 100 km long that is interpreted as an accretionary wedge in a basin that closed during the assembly of West Gondwanaland. Kyanite was named by Abraham Gottlieb Werner in 1789 from kyanos, the Greek word for blue. The mineral was called "cyanite" by mineralogists using the French spelling, during most the 19th and early 20th centuries, though it can also be black (as these), white, and various shades o