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that's the thing though, nothing about Pyrope Undertale is particularly Terezi, of course Toby had heard of Terezi Pyrope but someone who didn't could easily have made that on their own, so you can't really prove that it's a reference
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Replying to @imperialgarnets
I like you too pyrope... I like all garnets ...... ok? I just have a special place in my heart for hessonite im sorry pyrope dont.kill me . Hi you two hihihi
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⚠️Specialist Highly technical terminology Continues for - Griffins System of Crystallography - 1841 - 📜 PART 3 📜 LVI. Tourmalinology The science of Tourmaline, one of nature's most chemically diverse crystal families. Nineteenth-century mineralogists regarded Tourmaline as a wonder-mineral because its crystals displayed extraordinary elongation, striation, coloration, and electrical peculiarities. Tourmalinology bridges crystallography, electro-mineralogy, geochemistry, and natural philosophy. To Griffin's generation, Tourmaline suggested that geometry and hidden forces cooperate in producing mineral structure. LVII. Garnet Cosmology A study of the vast kingdom of garnets, including Almandine, Grossular, Pyrope, Uwarowite, and numerous related forms. Garnets fascinated crystallographers because they frequently exhibit highly symmetrical dodecahedral and trapezohedral structures. Garnet Cosmology explores how one mineral family manifests a remarkable diversity of chemical compositions while preserving coherent geometrical laws. LVIII. Feldspathic World-Building The science of Feldspars as planetary construction materials. Griffin's index is filled with Albite, Orthoklas, Labradorite, Oligoclase, and Adularia. Modern geology confirms what early mineralogists suspected: feldspars constitute much of Earth's crust. Feldspathic World-Building studies the minerals that literally form continents, mountains, granites, and planetary foundations. LIX. Labradoritic Luminosity The study of Labradorite and related feldspars displaying unusual optical effects. Long before spectroscopy matured, such minerals inspired curiosity concerning light, color, and internal structure. Their iridescence suggested hidden worlds concealed within stone. LX. Emerald Morphodynamics A science examining Emerald not merely as a gem but as a crystallographic phenomenon. Emeralds unite beauty, rarity, chemistry, and geometry. Griffin's treatment places them within a broader mineral kingdom rather than isolating them as jewelry. LXI. Beryl Architectonics The study of Beryl, Aquamarine, and Emerald as members of a shared structural family. Beryl Architectonics examines the hexagonal frameworks through which these celebrated minerals manifest themselves. LXII. Corundic Sciences The investigation of Corundum, Sapphire, and Oriental Ruby. Before modern materials science recognized corundum's extraordinary hardness, mineralogists already appreciated its structural perfection. Corundic Sciences studies one of nature's most durable crystalline architectures. LXIII. Diamond Philosophy An inquiry into Diamond as a union of simplicity and perfection. Diamond contains only carbon, yet displays one of the most orderly crystal structures known. For natural philosophers, this demonstrated how immense complexity may arise from elemental simplicity. LXIV. Topazian Morphology The study of Topaz and its characteristic crystal habits. Topaz served nineteenth-century mineralogists as an important example of how geometry, chemistry, and transparency combine within a single mineral species. LXV. Zirconic Antiquarianism Long before zircon became a tool for estimating Earth's age, it fascinated crystallographers because of its durable form and distinctive geometries. Zirconic Antiquarianism studies minerals that preserve some of the oldest records of planetary history. LXVI. Lapidary Historiography The historical study of gemstones and ornamental minerals. Griffin's index preserves continuity with Greek, Roman, medieval, Renaissance, and Enlightenment traditions concerning precious stones. LXVII. Mineral Heraldry The science of identifying minerals through characteristic forms. Just as coats of arms identify noble families, crystal habits identify mineral species. Griffin devoted immense effort to creating this visual language of recognition. LXVIII. Geognostic Mineralogy An older geological discipline concerned with understanding the Earth's structure through direct observation of minerals and rocks. Geognosy preceded modern geology and sought a descriptive understanding of terrestrial architecture. LXIX. Neptunic Geology The study of geological processes emphasizing aqueous origins. Influenced by earlier geological debates, this science interpreted many formations as products of ancient waters, oceans, and sedimentary deposition. LXX. Plutonic Geology The opposing school emphasizing heat, magma, and subterranean fire. Griffin's period still lived amidst the great debate between aqueous and igneous explanations of Earth's formation. LXXI. Vulcanological Mineral Philosophy The investigation of minerals associated with volcanic environments. Such minerals revealed how fire, heat, pressure, and chemistry could generate highly ordered crystalline structures. LXXII. Metallogenic Morphology The study of metal-bearing minerals through their forms. Griffin's extensive listings of copper, silver, arsenic, nickel, antimony, tellurium, cobalt, and lead minerals reveal a forgotten geometrical approach to ore science. LXXIII. Telluric Metallosophy An exploration of tellurium minerals such as Graphic Tellurium and Telluric Silver. These rare substances occupied an almost legendary status among nineteenth-century collectors because of their scarcity and unusual compositions. LXXIV. Arsenical Mineral Philosophy The study of arsenic-bearing minerals including Realgar, Orpiment, Mispickel, Arsenical Pyrites, and others. Such species revealed astonishing chemical diversity hidden within the Earth's crust. LXXV. Antimonial Sciences The examination of antimony minerals such as Antimonglanz and Antimonblende. These ores fascinated early chemists because they displayed unusual metallic properties and complex crystal habits. LXXVI. Cobaltic Mineralogy The science of cobalt-bearing minerals. Long before cobalt became associated with modern technologies, its minerals occupied important positions in chemical and mineralogical classification. LXXVII. Nickelic Ore Analytics The study of nickel minerals and their structural relationships. Griffin's catalogue preserves numerous obscure nickel species rarely discussed outside specialist mineralogy. LXXVIII. Uranitic Antiquities A science devoted to uranium minerals before nuclear science transformed their cultural meaning. Uranite and related minerals were appreciated for their geometry, coloration, and rarity rather than their energetic potential. LXXIX. Rare Earth Proto-Chemistry The investigation of minerals containing cerium, yttrium, lanthanum, gadolinium, and related elements. Griffin's work preserves one of the earliest windows into what would later become rare-earth chemistry. LXXX. Monazitic Studies The examination of Monazite as a repository of uncommon elements. Although little understood in Griffin's day, such minerals hinted at hidden chemical territories awaiting discovery. LXXXI. Gadolinite Frontier Science Gadolinite became one of the gateways through which entirely new elemental families entered scientific awareness. Its importance extends far beyond its outward appearance. LXXXII. Ceritic Geochemistry The study of cerium-bearing mineral species. These substances challenged older classifications and expanded the known boundaries of chemistry. LXXXIII. Yttric Mineral Frontiers The exploration of yttrium minerals as evidence of previously unknown elemental domains. Griffin unknowingly documents the dawn of rare-earth science. LXXXIV. Zeolitic Cathedral Architecture A study of minerals such as Stilbite, Chabasite, Harmotome, Natrolite, Scolezite, and Heulandite. Their frameworks resemble microscopic cathedrals composed of repeating chambers, passages, and geometrical halls. LXXXV. Framework Mineralogy The science of minerals whose internal structures consist of interconnected networks rather than simple arrangements. Modern structural chemistry later confirmed the extraordinary significance of these architectures . ⚠️ See NEXT reply for LXXXVI-CVI, including: • Swedenborgian crystal parallels • Sacred geometry and natural theology • Biblical gemstone sciences • Mineral correspondences in Exodus, Ezekiel, and Revelation • Crystal symbolism from antiquity through 1899 • Ether theories and crystal media • Magnetism, electricity, and crystal forces • Proto-cosmology, proto-material science, and forgotten ologies almost never discussed today.
⚠️ Contributions to Literature, Science, Natural Philosophy, Geology, Crystallography, Mineral Cosmology, Ancient Knowledge Traditions, and Forgotten Ologies in Griffin's System of Crystallography (1841)(see Quote Share for Abstract & Link to book & see Pictures for extremely rare crystallography information you will not learn anywhere else. This knowledge is pretty much extinct. #26-55 XXVI. Seven-Form Reductionism One of Griffin's boldest intellectual achievements. He argues that the overwhelming diversity of crystal forms ultimately reduces to seven fundamental geometrical archetypes. Thousands of visible variations emerge from a small family of governing structures. This resembles linguistic grammar, where countless sentences arise from limited underlying rules. The theory anticipates later scientific quests for unifying principles behind apparent complexity. XXVII. Archetypal Crystallonomy The study of ideal crystal forms underlying observable mineral structures. Griffin repeatedly seeks original geometrical templates from which complicated combinations descend. This science concerns the search for hidden architectural blueprints embedded within nature and recalls Platonic discussions concerning ideal forms governing material reality. XXVIII. Zone Dynamics Zones are among the most neglected concepts in modern popular science. Griffin treats them as linear pathways connecting crystal faces according to lawful geometric relationships. Zone Dynamics studies these invisible corridors, revealing how distant parts of a crystal remain mathematically connected through common structural principles. XXIX. Meridianal Geometry Extending his geographical analogy, Griffin introduces crystal meridians resembling those of terrestrial globes. Meridianal Geometry investigates great-circle relationships between planes, faces, and poles. This transforms mineralogy into a form of internal geography where crystals possess directional networks comparable to cartographic systems. XXX. Equatorial Morphometry The measurement and analysis of crystal equators. These structural belts define relationships among numerous faces and become essential for understanding symmetry. Griffin's treatment elevates the equator from a geographical concept to a universal geometric principle operating throughout crystallized matter. XXXI. Polar Position Analytics The science of determining the location and significance of crystal planes relative to polar systems. Griffin developed sophisticated methods for denoting polaric positions, creating a highly organized framework for understanding complex crystal arrangements. This field resembles celestial coordinate systems applied to mineral structures. XXXII. Spherical Crystallometry The application of spherical geometry to mineral form. Crystal relationships often cannot be fully understood through flat geometry alone. Griffin employs spherical methods to analyze angular relationships, opening a realm where crystals become objects inhabiting geometrical spheres rather than simple Euclidean planes. XXXIII. Solid Triangle Science A highly advanced branch of nineteenth-century geometry. Griffin's use of solid triangles demonstrates how three-dimensional relationships govern crystal architecture. Unlike ordinary plane triangles, solid triangles exist in spatial frameworks and reveal the hidden mathematics controlling mineral structure. XXXIV. Quadrantal Analytics The science of quadrantal triangles and their application to crystallographic calculations. This obscure mathematical discipline enabled mineralogists to solve difficult geometrical problems before electronic computation existed. It reflects the immense mathematical sophistication underlying early crystallography. XXXV. Logarithmic Mineral Mathematics Griffin's extensive use of logarithms reveals the computational world of nineteenth-century science. Before calculators, logarithmic methods transformed impossible calculations into manageable operations. This field demonstrates how mathematical ingenuity expanded humanity's ability to understand mineral structures. XXXVI. Geometrical Verification Science An often-overlooked contribution. Griffin repeatedly emphasizes methods for checking measurements and calculations. This represents an early philosophy of scientific verification, ensuring that observations remain trustworthy and reproducible. XXXVII. Morphological Exactitude The pursuit of precision in form description. Griffin sought a language capable of describing even the most complicated crystal combinations without ambiguity. Morphological Exactitude becomes both a scientific method and an intellectual ideal. XXXVIII. Crystal Identity Theory A sophisticated investigation into what makes one crystal form distinct from another. Griffin examines how structural identity persists despite modifications, truncations, and combinations. This touches deep philosophical questions concerning sameness, variation, and classification. XXXIX. Polyhedral Ontology The study of being as expressed through geometrical form. Griffin implicitly asks why certain polyhedra repeatedly emerge throughout the mineral kingdom. Polyhedral Ontology examines the existence and significance of recurring geometrical realities in nature. XL. Mineral Morphogenesis The investigation of how crystal forms arise through growth. Griffin's theories seek to understand not merely finished structures but developmental processes. Morphogenesis bridges mineralogy, geometry, and natural philosophy. XLI. Geometric Vitalism of Form Although Griffin remains scientific, his work belongs to an era fascinated by formative powers operating within nature. Many nineteenth-century thinkers perceived geometry as evidence of active organizational principles guiding matter into lawful arrangements. XLII. Crystalline Architectonics The study of crystals as architectural systems. Every plane functions like a wall. Every edge resembles a structural joint. Every axis becomes a supporting framework. Griffin transforms minerals into miniature monuments of natural engineering. XLIII. Mineral Kingdom Cartography The classification of crystal territories across the entire mineral world. Griffin's catalogues map hundreds of species into ordered systems. This represents one of the most ambitious attempts to create a comprehensive geography of mineral form. XLIV. Rare Earth Proto-Geochemistry The index contains numerous minerals associated with cerium, yttrium, gadolinium, lanthanum, and related elements. Long before modern rare-earth industries existed, Griffin preserved evidence of the mineral sources that would later transform technology. XLV. Ceritic Mineral Science The study of cerium-bearing minerals. Such substances fascinated nineteenth-century chemists because they hinted at hidden elemental families not fully understood at the time. Griffin's catalogues preserve early encounters with these mysterious materials. XLVI. Yttric Mineral Philosophy Minerals containing yttrium occupied a special place in chemical history. They often resisted simple classification and revealed previously unknown elemental complexities. Griffin records them as part of the expanding frontier of mineral discovery. XLVII. Gadolinitic Studies Gadolinite played a central role in the discovery of rare-earth chemistry. Griffin's inclusion of such minerals demonstrates how crystallography intersected with emerging chemical revolutions. These substances later helped reveal entirely new regions of the periodic system. XLVIII. Uranitic Mineralogy Long before atomic science transformed uranium into a household word, uranium minerals appeared as beautiful crystallographic specimens. Griffin documents these forms purely as mineralogical wonders, preserving a world before nuclear associations dominated public imagination. XLIX. Telluric Metallography Tellurium minerals were among the strangest substances known to nineteenth-century mineralogists. Their rarity and unusual compositions made them scientific curiosities. Griffin's catalogues preserve this forgotten realm of metallic mineral diversity. L. Vanadic Ore Science Vanadium-bearing minerals represented another frontier of chemical exploration. Their inclusion demonstrates how crystallography functioned as a gateway into the discovery of previously unknown elemental worlds. LI. Titaniferous Morphology The study of titanium minerals and their crystal structures. Long before aerospace applications existed, titanium was primarily a mineralogical mystery. Griffin records the geometrical manifestations through which the element revealed itself. LII. Zeolitic Architectonics One of the most remarkable hidden sciences in the book. Zeolites such as Stilbite, Chabasite, Natrolite, Harmotome, and Heulandite form intricate frameworks resembling miniature architectural complexes. Modern science recognizes their extraordinary structural sophistication, yet Griffin already appreciated their geometric beauty. LIII. Chabasitic Geometry The study of Chabasite and related forms. These minerals display elegant symmetries and highly ordered structures. Griffin's catalogues reveal the importance assigned to such species within early mineral classification. LIV. Natrolitic Morphology Natrolite exhibits distinctive needle-like crystal habits and structural regularity. Griffin's inclusion of these forms demonstrates his commitment to documenting the immense diversity of crystal architectures. LV. Harmotomic Science The investigation of Harmotome and its remarkable cruciform crystal habits. Such minerals fascinated early crystallographers because they embodied complex symmetry relationships visible to the naked eye. ⚠️See Next reply for next Parts LVI-LXXXV (56-85), covering: • Tourmaline mysteries • Garnet cosmology • Diamond philosophy • Feldspathic world-building • Neptunian vs Plutonic geology • Swedenborgian comparisons • Ancient lapidaries • Biblical gemstones • Sacred geometry of minerals • Forgotten geological and cosmological sciences • Proto-fields virtually unknown today.
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Replying to @Mekumek
You are THE Terezi Pyrope You are amazing yo
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Terezi pyrope would probably love madness combat
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Replying to @Mekumek
It's ok MekuMeku otherwise known as Terezi Pyrope
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Replying to @Cunga_Bunga
I wish Terezi pyrope was a feared name. Siiigh
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Replying to @JUST1C31SBL1ND
Wo8h, really???????? I d8dn't know, Pyrope! Wit8 that kind of s8onge in your p8n why d8n't you j8st go 8nd solve 8orld fuc8ing hung8r? 8ctually why stop there, why d8n't you end hunger in 8eneral? I'm 8nly getting sta88ed 8ECAUSE of 8ad l8ck!!!!!!!!
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bg retweeted
they’re saying terezi pyrope is the most successful blue trans chaser of all time
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TWAXTIOR retweeted
DETECTIVE PYROPE AND MISS EGBERT: THE DATE a silly noir AU #homestuck #juneegbert #terezipyrope #junerezi
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Pictures Background Remove & clipping path Service retweeted
Woven Garnet Bead Necklace, Maroon Red Pyrope Gemstone, Adjustable Silk Strand by serendipitytreasure dlvr.it/TT14Fm
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gaytor tot (tay) retweeted
I told them to give me that estrogen that turns me into Terezi Pyrope
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Replying to @funnyvileplume
Terezi Pyrope :
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terezi pyrope speech bubble
i've been crying laughing at this for the past 10 minutes
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