Iceland spar
Iceland spar, formerly known as Iceland crystal, is a transparent variety of calcite, or crystallized calcium carbonate, originally brought from Iceland, and used in demonstrating the polarization of light (see polarimetry). It occurs in large readily cleavable crystals, easily divisible into rhombs, and is remarkable for its double refraction. Historically, the phenomena of this crystal were studied at length by Christiaan Huygens and Isaac Newton. Sir George Stokes also studied the phenomenon.
Viking "sunstone"
It has been speculated that the Vikings used the light-polarizing property of Iceland spar, which they called sunstone (a different mineral than the gem-quality sunstone), to tell the direction of the sun on cloudy days, for navigational purposes.
In 2007, Ramón Hegedüs and his colleagues from Eotvos Lorand University in Budapest, Hungary, confirmed that the polarization of sunlight in the Arctic can be detected using a sunstone. Their research is reported in "The Proceedings of the Royal Society."
In literature
Thomas Pynchon references the doubling property of Iceland spar in his 2006 novel Against the Day. A section of the novel is entitled "Iceland Spar".
Phillip Pullman references the doubling property of Iceland spar in his 2000 novel The Amber Spyglass, the third volume in the His Dark Materials trilogy.
Translation of "Iceland spar"
Estonian: Islandi pagu, Spanish: Espato de Islandia, Basque: Islandiako espatoa, Icelandic: Silfurberg, Latvian: Īslandes špats, Polish: Szpat islandzki, Ukrainian: Ісландський шпат.
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