Stilbite is abundant in the volcanic rocks of
Iceland,
Faroe Islands,
Isle of Skye,
Bay of Fundy,
Nova Scotia (where it is the provincial mineral), northern
New Jersey and
North Carolina. Salmon-pink crystals occur with pale green
apophyllite in the
Deccan Traps near
Mumbai (Bombay) and
Pune,
India; white sheaf-like groups encrust the calcite (
Iceland-spar) of Berufjord near Djupivogr in Iceland; brown sheafs are found near
Paterson, New Jersey in the
United States; and crystals of a brick-red color are found at Old Kilpatrick,
Scotland. Iceland is generally considered to be the
type locality for stilbite-Ca. It is presumed to be the Helgusta Iceland Spar Mine, along Reydarfjordur. Excellent white bow ties of stilbite are found here on calcite and quartz, associated with heulandite and
laumontite in cavities. The type locality for stilbite-Na is Cape Pula,
Pula,
Cagliari Province,
Sardinia,
Italy. Small, lustrous, white or pink, pointed blades of stilbite-Na, and formless masses, up to 5 cm in diameter, have been found there, covering a thin crust of reddish
heulandite in large fractures and cavities in the highly weathered volcanic
andesite or
rhyolite. The
Tertiary Deccan basalts of western India are the most prolific sources of stilbite in the world. Stilbite is the most abundant zeolite in the
tholeiitic basalt plateaux near
Nasik and Pune and decreases in abundance toward the coast at Mumbai. ==Photo gallery==