Below the stone ring of a nineteenth-century Navajo hogan: a piece of sun-purpled glass—pre-1914, when a process was discovered that prevented clear glass from purpling in sunlight—between two snake vertebrae.

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Below the stone ring of a nineteenth-century Navajo hogan: a piece of sun-purpled glass—pre-1914, when a process was discovered that prevented clear glass from purpling in sunlight—between two snake vertebrae.

Perhaps you’d like to write that one?
They stopped adding manganese to the glass. It was added to counteract the greenish tinge (from Iron? I’m guessing). That’s what the sun transforms and turns purple. I developed a beautiful pale purple glass back in the day with tin and manganese and nickel—at least that’s what I recall. It’s been almost 60 years.