Emmonsite, also known as durdenite, is an iron tellurite mineral with the formula: Fe2(TeO3)3·2(H2O). Emmonsite forms triclinic crystals. It is of a yellowish-green color, with a vitreous lustre, and a hardness of 5 on the Moh scale.
Emmonsite was first described in 1885 for an occurrence in the Tombstone District, Cochise County, Arizona. It was named for the American geologist, Samuel Franklin Emmons, (1841–1911), of the United States Geological Survey.
Emmonsite is found, often with quartz or cerussite in the Tombstone, Arizona area. It is also associated with native tellurium, tellurite, native gold, pyrite, rodalquilarite, mackayite, sonoraite, cuzticite and eztlite.
Listen my friend for I shall bestow the secret of
happiness upon you:
no greater joy than the excitement of a wild snowball
fight,
no greater cosiness than the warmth of an open fire,
no greater achievement than forced genetic stride
So to fulfil this holy trinity, to inseparably unite
them
into oneness, there is, logically, only one way:
creation of a
nuclear winter
wonderland, pure bliss
condensed into crystalline white with just a hint of a
green tinge.
Just let your inner eye
gaze into this marvellous glance:
Children running (around), whooping, flinging three
snowballs at once.
not everyone
may recognize
that we’re in store for a future so bright
Such a dear sight,
who needs a
Christmas carol
when one can have a fission parol?
Just press that cute little button, such a lovely shade
of red, and of you go, the dream comes true, in the end
Snow gently caressing the earth, the dream of every
little boy
Snow gently caressing the earth, the children radiate
with joy
not everyone
may recognize
that we’re in store for a future so bright
We should
Ask ourselves
With open eyes
isn't the quest for bliss worth a few million
sacrificed?
we will behold the genesis of a paradise:
the nuclear winter wonderland shall arise
Snow gently caressing the earth,
the dream of every girl and boy
Snow gently caressing the earth,