The Giant Geode of Pulpí
Boulder, Colo., USA: The geode  of Pulpí is an 11-meter hollow ovoid with crystal-paneled walls. It is like  those familiar couplets of stone interiors covered with bright crystallites,  but so large that several people can fit inside. The crystals, of up to two  meters in size, are so transparent that they look like ice crystals. In this paper  for Geology, Juan  Manuel García-Ruiz and  colleagues reveal the geological history that ended with the formation of the  Pulpí geode.
Like the giant crystals of Naica in Mexico (see  the 2007 Geology article by García-Ruiz  and colleagues at https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geology/article/35/4/327/129804/),  the crystals of Pulpí are gypsum (calcium sulfate with two water molecules). García-Ruiz  says, “To reveal their formation has been a very tough task because unlike in  the case of Naica, where the hydrothermal system is still active, the large  geode of Pulpí is a fossilized environment.” 
The team performed a study of the geology and  geochemistry of the abandoned mine where the geode was found, including a  detailed mapping of the underground mining works, which has been used to allow  the tourist visits in the mine.
They found that the crystals of Pulpi formed at  around 20 °C, at a shallow depth where the temperature fluctuations of the climate  are still perceptible. These temperature fluctuations, being below the maximum  solubility of gypsum (40 °C), led to the dissolution and recrystallization  amplifying a maturation process that is known as Ostwald maturation. 
Says García-Ruiz, “This is somewhat like the  temperature cycles in crystal quality control in industrial processes.” A continuous  supply of salt for the formation of the crystals was provided by the  dissolution of anhydrite (the anhydrous form of calcium sulfate), the mechanism  accounting for the formation of the large crystals of Naica. 
Because of their purity, the crystals forming the  geode cannot be dated precisely. But indirect constraint can be done: “They grew  for sure after the desiccation of the Mediterranean Sea that occurred 5.6  million years ago. They are most probably younger than two million years but  older than 60.000 years because this is the age of the carbonate crust coating  one of the large gypsum crystal,” says García-Ruiz.
Video of the crystal cave: https://www.dropbox.com/s/c3dziwp1gd6kbou/PULPI%201.Ingles.mov?dl=0
 
FEATURED ARTICLE
The  origin of large gypsum crystals in the Geode of Pulpí (Almería, Spain)
A. Canals; A.E.S. Van Driessche; F. Palero; J.M.  García-Ruiz (contact: juanmanuel.garcia@csic.es)
URL: https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geology/article/doi/10.1130/G46734.1/574380/The-origin-of-large-gypsum-crystals-in-the-Geode
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