LIGHT FROM DERBYSHIRE SPAR.
Pound, coarsely, some of the dark blue or the fetid variety of Derbyshire spar; heat it in a dark room, in a platinum spoon, over the low flame of a spirit-lamp, and the spar will shine with a beautiful purple tint.
Pounded swinestone, calcareous spar, and powdered quartz, will also give out light, if strewn upon a fire-shovel which has been heated red-hot, and has just ceased glowing.
A variety of fluor spar, found in granite in Siberia, will shine in the dark when warmed, with a remarkably strong phosphorescent light, increasing as the temperature is raised. The light augments when the spar is plunged into water; and in boiling water, the spar becomes so luminous that the letters of a printed book can be seen in a dark room near the glass containing it.
Another variety of fluor spar, also found in Siberia, is of a pale violet colour, and emits a white light merely by the heat of the hand; and when put into boiling water, it will give out a green light.