As some of you know, glass composition and glass fluorescence are particular interests of mine. So if I tend to ramble on about them and ask lot of questions, that's why.

I'm sure there's a lot of green glass on ebay that is said to be uranium glass but isn't. Still, I think a lot of it one wouldn't expect to contain U based on the photos (I wouldn't, anyway). I was just reading some old threads in another forum, chataboutdg.com, about green fluorescent Depression glass. Unfortunately, you have to be registered to see them, but here are the threads for those who are registered or would like to. It's an excellent board if you have anything you suspect is American Elegant or Depression.
http://chataboutdg.com/invision/index.php?showtopic=8290
http://chataboutdg.com/invision/index.php?showtopic=8124
http://chataboutdg.com/invision/index.php?showtopic=8366 Mod: links no longer work after website reorganisation. There's a married couple there who collect transparent green Depression glass and they're quite interested in the causes of fluorescence. Much of their glass contains uranium. I'm not a collector of uranium glass, and don't have the eye for it that others would, but FWIW some of it I wouldn't have pegged as uranium. A couple pieces I used to own are shown below, a Tiffin center handled server and a Cambridge bowl. Both looked pretty normal (to my eye) under most light, though they'd glow a bit at dusk.
Cambridge's Willow Blue also had uranium in the formula:
The green glass collectors have a shortwave UV light as well as a longwave. They showed a couple photos of a sugar and creamer set that glowed bright green in LW UV, but in shortwave, one glowed green and one glowed bright blue! A good example of glass formulas changing over the years.
This is irrelevant, but neodymium is used as a decolorant sometimes, and is supposed to fluoresce in LWUV. Does anyone know what color?
Concerning different glass compositions in different regions, Gary Baldwin in
Moser Artistic Glass reportedly used the combination of shortwave and longwave UV to discern among 3 glass types: Bohemian potash-lime, Venetian soda-lime, and European lead crystal. Apparently most Bohemian non-lead glass formulas from about 1850-1930 were based on one by Meyr's Neffe. Although he seemed to be aware that you have to be careful with your testing, it's hard to know what range of glass he used, and how many replicates. It would be nice to know if his results were reproducible.
Incidentally, he also found a gradual change in the shortwave fluorescence color of Moser through the 20th C...makes one wonder about the use it might have in dating if something like that could be properly documented.
Mod: Links to clicksnipwow removed as site is no longer connected to glass. Please visit http://chataboutdg.com/forums/ and use the search function instead