Chalcedony is one of the cryptocrystalline varieties of the mineralquartz, having a waxy lustre. It may be semitransparent or translucent and is usually white to gray or grayish-blue or some shade of brown, sometimes nearly black. Other shades have been given different names. A clear red chalcedony is known as carnelian or sard[?]; a green variety colored by nickeloxide is called chrysoprase[?]. Prase[?] is a dull green. Plasma is a bright to emerald-green chalcedony which is sometimes found with small spots of jasper resembling blooddrops; it has been referred to as blood stone[?] or heliotrope[?]. The term chalcedony is derived from the Greek word meaning Chalkedon[?], a town in Asia Minor.
... at Louvain, and was admitted to the religious profession on October 7, 1860. Three years later he was sent to Hawaii, where he was ordained on May 24, 1864. On May ...