A very well balanced example of cavansite on matrix, with two deep blue clusters and a bit of adjacent stilbite, on a heulandite-covered matrix. There is a a rub on the top/back of the cluster, but it isn't immediately apparent unless you are looking from above.. and I still think it's a pretty miniature.
Although discovered in Oregon, the best examples have come from this complex of 4 quarries outside of Wagholi. In the early 90's a single 1 cm, matrixless ball would have cost about $500-- as the excavations progressed, workings gradually reached the zone where cavansite and (later pentagonite) were more abundant, and prices crashed. At this point, the quarry is deep enough that it is getting regularly flooded, and as is typically the case with many suburban Indian localities, quarries that were once on the outskirts of town are getting engulfed by the neighboring city. BS hype aside (there is always some rumor about a quarry closure) new material *is* getting noticeably harder to find, though there is still plenty available from the last several years of diggings. It may be hard to think of an Indian zeolite as anything but abundant, but if there is one thing I have learned buying Chinese minerals, it is that no matter how abundant something seems, it inevitably suddenly disappears.....