World's Largest Crystals 142
el_guapo writes: "OK, this is just cool. From here, a mining company in Mexico opened up a couple of chambers containing the world's largest known crystals. From the article 'Walking into either of these caves is like stepping into a gigantic geode.'" Looks pretty impressive.
Re:Kudos all around (Score:1)
Re:Wow those are big (Score:1)
In any case, I wan to sneak in there and take one home. Make it the center piece of my kitchen.
According to the article, the last guy that tried it ended up being crushed by the crystal he tried to pilfer.
This just in... (Score:1)
Re:Weird stuff... (Score:1)
Re:Earth: Now With Flavor Crystals(tm)! (Score:1)
F. Scott Fitzgerald was right! (Score:1)
Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
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Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
DMT (Score:1)
Re:Nice --- (Score:1)
Wow those are big (Score:1)
In any case, I wan to sneak in there and take one home. Make it the center piece of my kitchen.
New Agers (Score:1)
Karma is as karma does
Re:Weird stuff... (Score:1)
-B
Monster Crystals (Score:1)
Disturbing (Score:1)
Inconsiderate bastards (Score:1)
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Nice --- (Score:1)
Score 1 for ecotourism, even if it's just some really huge crystals.
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Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
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Patrick Doyle
Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
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Patrick Doyle
Re:www.superlivingspace.com (Score:1)
And no wonder. All that unrelieved whiteness. How about a throw pillow, Supes?
-- gold23
superman already discovered these (Score:1)
Is it hot enough? (Score:1)
100 degrees F is nothing! Heck, it's hotter than that for most of the day durung most of the summer here in the 6th largest city in the USA, Phoenix, AZ. (or is it 8th, I guess it depends on who you ask)
One of my previous (way previous) jobs was as a ramp agent (those guys that wave those orange wands to direct the planes around, and mess up your luggage [most of the times, not at the same time]) at Sky Harbor International Airport. The official temperature for this one particular day was 118 defrees F. We took a thermometer out to the area we were working (underneath, and behind the airplains (mostly 727, 737 and MD80/88 models, so little jets) and the ambient air was over 150 degrees F. The higher air temp was due to the large blacktop surface, and the fact that jet engines happen to put out a lot of heat.
It was toasty, but did we complain? Heck yea we did! I mean that's freakin hot!!!
OT: Not long after I left that job, Phoenix hit a record official temp of 122 F. They had to close the airport for several hours because the charts that Boeing and Co. put out for safe distances for takeoff and landing did not go that high. After a couple of million of lost revinue later, the charts were updated.
-Joe
Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
Or they could just limit the number of people they allow to pass through there. It's not as if Naica, Mexico gets a ton of tourists as it is, and how many non-locals are going to drive a far ways in order to see them?
Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
Entropy. I'd write out the delta-G, H and temperature equations, but they slip my mind right now because I don't have class tomorrow so I'm drinking right now. Real quick: use energy to do work, or else fall apart, or something. Please don't ask me to write the next text book.
I named the Human leader Kojack.
Cave temperature? (Score:1)
Re:Cave temperature? (Score:1)
More specifically... (Score:1)
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Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
If you can find contentment and fulfilment just 'knowing' that FFFish is there, then he don't actually have to be there: it's a Schrodinger's Cat situation.
Myself, I'll need to see 'im to believe 'im. I'd prefer to see him in his natural setting, and I'd very much prefer that setting to last millenia and enthrall millions of people.
If he's shut off from view, well, then, he might as well be destroyed. If I have to look at old pictures or otherwise imagine that I'm seeing him, then I can just as well imagine something even more grand. The existance or non-existance of the marvel becomes immaterial, if no one's allowed to see him.
- Steeltoe
Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
Personally I think you got it wrong. _I_ am the only sapient being in the universe. You're just a figment of my imagination not worth a second thought.
- Steeltoe
A few words (Score:1)
- Steeltoe
Re:Wow those are big (Score:1)
http://dsc.discovery.com/news/briefs/20010205/gall ery/crystals_zoom.jpg [discovery.com] l ery/crystals2_zoom.jpg [discovery.com]
http://dsc.discovery.com/news/briefs/20010205/gal
Re:I would like mine.... (Score:1)
Ironic Location (Score:1)
I find it just a bit ironic that the world's largest crystals are found in Chihuahua. I mean why not in "Great" Denmark.
Re:Kudos all around (Score:1)
On a side note, doesn't this look like the sort of thing you always see on cheezy movies abiout the deep underground? Not so chessy after all, it seems.
Books too. Wat comes to my mind is Robert Jordan's The Eye of the World... there's that scene at the Eye when they descend into the cave that is sort of a focus for saidin, only not really (I think Jordan hadn't quite stabilized his ideas on how the Power worked, then)... and it was full of glowing crystals.
Crystal caves: they're not just for cheesy movies and old apogee games any more!
Actually, I bet if you could somehow light the crystals in the cave, it would look really cool. It would, however, be a different beauty from the natural one of the cave. Although, ocme ot think of it, without some sort o light, it wouldn't look like anything.
-J
Re:Kudos all around (Score:1)
Still, I think some of his ideas were still solidifying at that point. For instance, the whole Traveling thing... the way in which Lews Therin and Ishamael travel in the prologue of Eye is pretty different from the method used later inthe series... of course, there could be different ways of traveling, I suppose, but the Forsaken do it too.
Wow. How's that for offtopic?
-J
Theft problems (Score:1)
Re:www.superlivingspace.com (Score:1)
*which is probably spelled different
Wiwi
"I trust in my abilities,
Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
value:
1 : a fair return or equivalent in goods, services, or money for something exchanged
2 : the monetary worth of something : marketable price
3 : relative worth, utility, or importance
Ummm so yeah, based on the definition, something only has value if it's useful to humans. When some turtles invent their own language with a similar word, I'll recant.
Go eat some sprouts hippie.
Re:Nice --- (Score:1)
Oh don't get your... (Score:1)
Function: verb
Inflected Form(s): kidded; kidding
Etymology: probably from 1kid
Date: 1902
transitive senses
1 : to deceive as a joke wouldn't kid you> 2 : to make fun of
intransitive senses : to engage in good-humored
fooling or horseplay -- often used with around
- kidder noun
- kiddingly
And yes, I am only a few steps to the right of Atilla the Hun, but at least I revel in the fact that the Right are decidedly not that, and accept that hypocrisy is a fact, not an insult. Left wing individuals begin foaming at the mouth the moment you question any of their ethics.
Re:Nice --- (Score:1)
Not all spelunkers are god's gift to caves. I'm hoping the cave owners will know enough to cordon off areas susceptable to human hand oils, and probably are smart enough to humidify the air in the cave. It's really not rocket science.
blessings,
Look, up in the sky... (Score:1)
Re:Nice --- (Score:1)
center of the earth (Score:1)
heh - i did submit this (Score:1)
Damn! (Score:1)
"How big is YOUR crystal?"
dang thats hot.... (Score:1)
Since its so hot, I must wonder... how long can people survive at 150?
Cooling chambers that are naturally warm like that would require a LOT of energy. It doesn't make sense, money-wise, to attempt to cool them. I know I sure wouldnt want to pay $20 to see crystals in an airconditioned cave.... I want to see them at 150 degrees and in their natural environment!
I got those crystals beat... (Score:1)
>:^D
Supermans Hangout (Score:1)
So where do you get crystals that large? (Score:1)
Wonder of Nature (Score:1)
The pictures from the website are amazing, but there is no way in which us slashdot geeks can take pride on that. Now, crashing aluminum foil on an asteroid is something any os could have worked on, thus its clear interest to this audience...
Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
'nuff said
Darwin Award candidate? (Score:1)
giggle.
Re:Airconditioning (Score:1)
And yes, the idea that, absent humans to appreciate it, this whole ball of dirt could be as barren as the Moon, is perfectly valid. Who would give a shit? 'Gaia'? Frankly, I like that concept more than the unexamined and undefended meme that "Nature" is somehow superior if "uncontaminated" by human presence. Check and defend your own damn assumptions, jerk.
PS)You are guilty of using your own homocentric viewpoint when you refer to "...the mess this planet is in." In a million years, I bet it will be hard for "this planet" to remember we were here.
PPS) huh...huh-huh...he said 'homo'.
The text... for those unable to get to the site.. (Score:1)
By Michael Ray Taylor, Discovery News
Feb. 8, 2001 -- The largest natural crystals on Earth have been discovered in two caves within a silver and zinc mine near Naica, in Chihuahua, Mexico, according to mine officials. Reaching lengths of over 20 feet, the clear, faceted crystals are composed of selenite, a crystalline form of the mineral gypsum.
"Walking into either of these caves is like stepping into a gigantic geode," said Richard D. Fisher, an American consultant with the mining company to develop the discoveries as tourist attractions.
Fisher said that most people can endure only a few minutes in the caves due to their high temperatures. The smaller of the two, which is about the size of two-bedroom apartment, is 100 Fahrenheit. The large chamber, which Fisher describes as the size of a Cathedral, is 150 F. Both are located approximately 1200 feet below the surface.
Selenite in Action
The mining company plans to air-condition the caves before opening them to the public next year, Fisher said. He adds that reducing the heat gradually will not harm the crystals.
The largest previously known crystals were found in the nearby Cave of the Swords, part of the same mine system. Some of these are now on display at the Smithsonian Institution. The local government and mine owners hope to avoid removing any of the new discoveries for museum displays or private collections, Fisher said.
While the mine company is currently limiting visitation of the caves to scientific experts, mineral hunters have destroyed locks and broken into the chambers twice since they were first opened by mining equipment last April. One man was killed when he attempted to chop out a gigantic crystal that fell from the ceiling and crushed him, according to Fisher.
"We need more onsite protection of mine caves," said geologist Carol A. Hill, co-author of the book Cave Minerals of the World, who calls the new discoveries "by far the largest selenite crystals I have ever heard of."
Hill applauds the tourism plan. "Without it, the mining company would probably destroy the caves. Museums have enough crystals," she said. "It's important to preserve discoveries like this where they occur."
Fisher and mine officials will display photographs and small samples of crystals from the new cave at the Tuscon Gem & Mineral Show in Arizona -- which starts today and runs through the weekend -- where they plan to organize a scientific study of the caves to take place in March.
Wow.... (Score:1)
NOT the largest crystals (Score:1)
By the way, someone mentioned pegmatites; it would be very unlikely to get selenite crystals in a pegmatite.
-Dave Hirsch, UT Austin, Ph.D. Geology
Look out! (Score:2)
Re:Nice --- (Score:2)
It's mostly the loss of moisture in the air, and the oils in the skins of people touching the rocks.
This is why the best caves are well-kept secrets by real spelunker orgs.
These caves will be "dead" in 20 years if they condition the air and bring tourists in.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Is this were Superman Lives? (Score:2)
Re:Weird stuff... (Score:2)
As a kid I bought two geodes from the gift shop of the Kirkpatrick Center/Omniplex in Oklahoma City. Kinda cool to a kid, I liked one best since it had a neater crystal in the middle.
Fast forward a couple of years and one of my teachers had a magnet made from hot gluing a geode to a magnetic disk. The funny thing was it was the other half to one of the geodes I had bought (the one I didn't like as much)!
Not proud of it but I stole it from her at the end of the year. (Sorry Mrs. Christie!)
I appreciate your effort (Score:2)
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Re:Airconditioning (Score:2)
So we do what you say: document and study it, record it to pictures and video, and then seal the cave from all humanity.
Once sealed, *their existence is immaterial*. The crystals could vaporize, and no one would be the wiser; or they could treble in size, and no one would know. No living thing would benefit from their existence... nor would any living thing be harmed by their loss.
In effect, they become an artifact of history and their present-day existence would be mere supposition and imagination.
That's infinitely more wasteful of their existence than opening up the caves to throngs of tourists.
If you really need to get tweaked about something, then please get tweaked about something that counts. There are plenty of things happening in the Brazilian rainforests that are having deep and lasting negative impact on living plants and creatures.
For starters, you can get uppity about the destruction caused by the rock hounds who are supplying all the new age shops with their "harmonious" crystals. Most of those crystals are obtained through extremely destructive practices. Yet not a single crystal-worshipping purchasers cares to acknowledge that they're supporting the destruction of rainforests. Hypocrites.
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Re:Airconditioning (Score:2)
If you can find contentment and fulfilment just 'knowing' that the rocks are there, then they don't actually have to be there: it's a Schrodinger's Cat situation.
Myself, I'll need to see 'em to believe 'em. I'd prefer to see them in their natural setting, and I'd very much prefer that setting to last millenia and enthrall millions of people.
If they're shut off from view, well, then, they might as well be destroyed. If I have to look at old pictures or otherwise imagine that I'm seeing them, then I can just as well imagine something even more grand. The existance or non-existance of the marvel becomes immaterial, if no one's allowed to see it.
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Re:Nice --- (Score:2)
...and yet you continue to assist in the destruction of cave environments, by actively spelunking.
Pot. Kettle. Black.
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Re:Airconditioning (Score:2)
It's not like you do, either, sitting on your pale white ass and posting to slashdot.
Just because it exists does not mean it has to be exploited.
--K
Fucking monkeys.
Re:Weird stuff... (Score:2)
funniest thing I've read all day
Re:Airconditioning (Score:2)
Re:Nice --- (Score:2)
To me, this seems to paralell the ideals behind free software. Everyone is given equal acess to the finite software resiource (coders can only work so hard), and everyone can appreciate it, all in the sense of irony. And if a microsofty can be one over for Linux or BSD, everyone wins.
Now, I like free software as much as the next guy, but when the idea is stretched and diluted in such strange manners as this, it just makes me want to dig my fingers up into that space between my eyeballs and eyelids, reach way back there, grab some fistfuls of brain and yank it out as my eyeballs pop out to make way and then dangle by the optic nerves providing a dizzying view of the ground below.
Wow, sometimes it just feels good to rant. What I'm trying to say is that to express the idea of equal access, you need not reach for an analogy to source code - especially when the topic you are discussing has absolutely nothing to do with software.
Re:Earth: Now With Flavor Crystals(tm)! (Score:2)
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Re:Flash required (Score:2)
Just a better browser. My mozilla, though I can see the story in the source, doesn't display dick.
Right about now I wish
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Hmm... (Score:2)
Don't people have any appreciation for what mother nature gives us? We all know the adage: "Don't fuck with mother nature!"
*cough*hurricanes*cough*tornadoes*cough*earthquake s*cough*
Why modded down? (Score:2)
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Re:Nice --- (Score:2)
maybe it's a swamp cooler.
All your events [openschedule.org] are belong to us.
Re:Nice --- (Score:2)
Score 1 for ecotourism, even if it's just some really huge crystals.
How can you be eco-friendly if you're using air conditioning?
Re:Wow those are big (Score:2)
________
I can't help but laugh . . . (Score:2)
Kudos all around (Score:2)
A plan like this keeps natural wonders like this intact and let's us general public take a peek and what's going on inside our planet.
On a side note, doesn't this look like the sort of thing you always see on cheezy movies abiout the deep underground? Not so chessy after all, it seems.
Re:I'm shocked. (Score:2)
Oh, save the whales! Beach the turtles! Oh, look! A sale on geodes and crystal pendants! I'll drive my Jeep Grand Cherokee
High School Debate Tactic #123.b:
If you are loosing the argument, call the oponent a 'hypocrite'. This will always discredit their opinions. This will have the added benefit of causing you to not alter your argument in any way.
As a special side note: Using this tactic to justify *YOUR* overconsumption will only fool other people - *YOU* know damn well what is right, your just to lazy, selfish and self-obsessed to admit it to yourself... its so much easier to insult another persons character then defend your own actions.
Re:Airconditioning (Score:2)
My simple point is that choosing the 'destiny' of a cave full of million year old crystals of that size (massive natural beuty) requires a massive amount of ego.. I cant understand what people like FFFish, maybe you, and mining companies think that because they 'discovered' this cave - they get to decide its future. That future is immediate and everlasting, and based on the rarity and intrinsic value in such a site, it should be left alone. Alone as in: Document and study, pictures and video, websites and books. Anything else is exploitation.
Even 'tourism' would be over use in my opinion... but all things considered would not be that great a tragedy if done properly (the site is maintained as the 'number one priority').
Re:Airconditioning (Score:2)
If I understand you correctly, you feel that you have no obligation to future people (you infer excepting your own children). You are obligated because you are a member of a community. You are obligated because previous generations thought about providing for you.
I've heard a 'proverb', accredited to the First Nations people: "You do not inherit the planet from your father - you borrow it from your sons."
If you'd like to - you can live your life in pursuit of satisfying your every need, without a care for anyone or anything else... no one will stop you. What a horrible, lonely, shallow existance it will be.
Wow - do you trip over your selfishness when you walk?
Danger, Will Robinson! (Score:2)
Re:Airconditioning (Score:2)
This weekend, I visited Luray Caverns in Virginia, USA. Apparently, the first air conditioned home in the world was built here in 1901. The owner (a retired ventilation engineer) just drilled a hole into the cave, and pumped the cool, limestone-filtered air into his home via a five-foot-diameter shaft. Story here [luraycaverns.com].
For the metric folk out here (Score:2)
For metric folk, with formatting this time (sorry) (Score:2)
Just so you can get an idea of how hot it is down there:
100 degrees F = 38 degrees C (rounded)
150 degrees F = 66 degrees C (rounded)
and 1200 feet = 366 m
66! ouch!
Re:Airconditioning (Score:2)
Now that that's cleared up, you guys can debate what disposition of the crystals is of most value to the only known sapient beings in the universe, humans.
Re:Nice --- (Score:2)
Re:Nice --- (Score:2)
Re:Airconditioning (Score:3)
It's not like the crystals, unseen and unharmed by the public, are doing anything remotely useful.
Other than generating "feel good vibes," preserving the crystals does no good whatsoever. And damaging the cave system isn't likely to be a big consideration, given that it's a *mining* company. Destroying rocks is what they do best.
I can appreciate, understand and give in to the sloppy sentimentality that's being displayed by so many Slashdotters -- but, on the other hand, I'm also pragmatic enough to admit that if the crystals aren't viewed by tourists, they might as well be chopped up and sold.
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Flash required (Score:3)
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I'm shocked. (Score:3)
Never stopped giving me a good wheeze. "Oh, save the whales! Beach the turtles! Oh, look! A sale on geodes and crystal pendants! I'll drive my Jeep Grand Cherokee that gets 10mpg the 100 miles to buy some!" Meanwhile there are thousands of slobs digging up huge portions of natural wilderness so they can sell these rocks for ten bucks a pop.
I'm in the wrong line of work...
At least these are being kept safe (for now). Those pictures looked very cool.
Weird stuff... (Score:3)
www.superlivingspace.com (Score:3)
*isnt that what its called...
Re:Airconditioning (Score:3)
Air conditioning tends to do this anyway. When the air is cooled moisture is removed, which is why air conditioners drip water.
Also, while selenite is not the most durable of minerals neither is it the most fragile in this sense. The much smaller selenites in my personal collection are unharmed after ~ 10 years despite being kept in open cabinets in New Orleans, LA which is not exactly a low-humidity environment.
In fact, the air conditioning would probably help to preserve the crystals, since the introduction of outside air cannot be undone. By making that outside air cooler and drier any damage to the crystals will be slowed.
I would like mine.... (Score:4)
________
Re:Nice --- (Score:4)
How about if they build glass tunnels through the caves and airconditioned only those while preserving the natural environment around the crystals. That would keep people from going of the trail and damaging crystals. It would prevent the new atmosphere from damaging the crystals. Also it would save a fortune on the air conditioning bill.
Re:Airconditioning (Score:4)
Moderators: Do your worst.. ive got karma to burn.
You know FFFish - its people like you who are responsible for the mess this planet is in...
*JUST EXISTING* and knowing that the Crystals are there is 'enough use' for their preservation. HUMANS of every generation feel they have the right to take anything they please with no consideration to the planet or future generations. Why the fuck should this natural wonder be forced to live up to some asshole's expectation of 'something usefull'? Have you no sense of wonder???? These Crystals took millenia to form - through natural processes of the planet - their mere existance should cause humans to reflect on the planet and the natural wonder around us... instead close minded jackasses like yourself spew shit like "anything remotely usefull".
Give your head a shake pal- 'God' willing - when your long dead and forgotten these things will still be here, despite your arrogance and hubris.
Airconditioning (Score:5)
There are ancient Egyptian sites that have been closed to tourists because the water vapour from the tourists was dissolving the relics, which had been preserved because of the dryness of the site.
I hope the mining company carefully monitors the effect of the airconditioning and tourists on the caves and crystals. They may need to shut down or limit the tourist access if tourism is having an adverse effect on the crystals or cave system.
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Re:Nice --- (Score:5)
What, then, would you have us do? Sure, we could preserve the caves indefinately by sealing them up forever. But then they would benifit no one.
As the article says, the choices, as far as the mining copmany sees it, is tourism and mining. Obviously mining the caves for the crystals in much more destructive than letting people take a look.
Even saying that we could avoid this dichotomy, what are the alternatives? Just let "seriosu" spelunker down there? That seems rather elitist to me. I'm not a seriopus spelunker, but I have a healthy respect for and awe of mother nature, and to be told that I can't go spreading around my water vapor, only "serious spelukners" just seems wrong to me. Shouldn't everyone be given equal access to the gaves, in anyone is giving access? Then everyone can enjoy them, and some regular guys might become interested in serious spelunking.
To me, this seems to paralell the ideals behind free software. Everyone is given equal acess to the finite software resiource (coders can only work so hard), and everyone can appreciate it, all in the sense of irony. And if a microsofty can be one over for Linux or BSD, everyone wins.