Willard Wulff was one of the original members of the
Colorado Springs Mineralogical Society, along with Lazard Cahn (Honorary
President for Life), Dr. E. L. Timmons, Willet R. Willis, Ceil Graves, O. A.
Reese, Leonard Sutton, George M. White, Robert D. Wilfley, Mrs. Edward L.
Kernochan, Miss Billie Bennett, Arthur Roe, Edwin Over, William E. Davis, Ralph
Monnell, H. E. Mathis, Frank Young, and Sigfrid Gross. Willard was born in 1904 and seemed
interested in rocks and minerals at a very young age. In 1928 he graduated from Colorado College
with a baccalaureate degree in Geological Engineering. Like many of his Colorado Springs mineral
colleagues, Willard spent time down at the office of Lazard Cahn who had “sessions
with the microscope” for a small group of “students” learning about
crystallography and micromounts.
Evidently Willard took a strong liking to collecting minerals via
micromounts and he collected, purchased, traded and mounted hundreds
(?thousands) of specimens in small cardboard boxes and later in those ubiquitous
perky boxes. Willard passed away in late 1998 and left
behind a tremendous collection of micromounts, and some larger mineral
specimens, that was managed by his daughter Wanda. Kristalle of Laguna Beach,
California, acquired ~200 specimens from Willard’s collection of macro (cabinet) and
have offered them for sale. And on July
23rd of 2016, an estate sale sold most other specimens and
equipment.
I was at the estate sale right on time and was able to purchase several micromounts, especially perky boxes filled with gold, silver and diamond crystals. I also acquired Willards’s binocular microscope, one macro specimen and 36 specimen labels printed by Lazard Cahn! For my perspective on Lazard Cahn see the Blog Posting September 17, 2015. For additional information on Willard’s life see his autobiography printed in March 2016 edition of the CSMS Newsletter (www.csms.us).
I was at the estate sale right on time and was able to purchase several micromounts, especially perky boxes filled with gold, silver and diamond crystals. I also acquired Willards’s binocular microscope, one macro specimen and 36 specimen labels printed by Lazard Cahn! For my perspective on Lazard Cahn see the Blog Posting September 17, 2015. For additional information on Willard’s life see his autobiography printed in March 2016 edition of the CSMS Newsletter (www.csms.us).
But the best part of this entire purchase was one
macro specimen, jordanite, that not only has the mineral label of Willard
Wulff, but the original collecting label of Lazard Cahn (located in my Cahn
label collection). I suppose this little
bit of personal happiness may not resonate with some readers: however, matching
a mineral specimen with a label from the famous Lazard Cahn collection is a
“big deal.”
Jordanite is a rather uncommon lead antimony arsenic
sulfide (Pb14(As,Sb)6S23]. A long time ago, in my beginning mineralogy
course, we classified minerals with a metal ion + a semimetal (replacing part
of the lead like arsenic, bismuth or antimony) + sulfur as a sulfosalt. Arsenic
is the dominant semimetal in jordanite and is in solid solution with the
antimony-rich variety, geocronite.
Jordanite is a mineral that certainly was not on my
radar until I saw the Wulff specimen indicating Cahn was the original owner. Then after seeing specimen photos on the Internet,
I decided that it actually was a pretty good specimen. It was collected from the Lengenbach Quarry
near Wallis, Switzerland (in the Alps), that MinDat describes as a “world
famous metamorphosed sulphosalt/sulfide deposit in sugary dolomite.” The quarry has yielded an amazing number of
minerals (141) with 39 of these minerals claiming Lengenbach as their Type
Locality (including jordanite). As best
that I can determine, the quarry wall rock was originally Triassic in age until
metamorphosed during the late Cretaceous-Tertiary. A later hydrothermal event produced a solution
enriched in arsenic, antimony and bismuth and also deposited the sulfosalt minerals
no sooner than 11 Ma (www.lengenbach.com).
Veins of jordanite running through a white sugar-grained dolomite. Width photo ~2.2 cm. |
Photomicrograph of photo above. Width of photo ~1.0 cm. |
Photograph of gemmy sphalerite (S) and jordanite crystals. Note the dipyramidal crystal (J). Width of photo ~4 mm. |
Jordanite has a lead-gray to black color and produces
a bright metallic luster and is very opaque.
It has an interesting conchoidal fracture, a dark brown streak and is
soft (3.0 Mohs). It belongs to the
Monoclinic Crystal System and produces striated (at times) prismatic and
dipyramidal crystals and sometimes forms pseudohexagonal twins. At times the individual grains appear as globular
and do not resemble any crystal shape while others are tabular. Without knowing
something about locality information, jordanite would be difficult (for me) to
recognize. Even then it could be easily confused with some of the other
sulfosalts such as geocronite.
A second micromount picked up at the sale once
belonged to Cahn but Willard traded for, and mounted, the specimen: cuprite from Ray,
Arizona. Cuprite is a simple oxide [Cu2O]
that is usually found in the oxidation zone, and is a product of the oxidation
of the copper primary minerals (the sulfides).
Cuprite is Isometric but produces a number of
crystal forms, including cubes, octahedrons, dodecahedrons and in special cases
long tubes or needles. This is an interesting specimen since there is a mixture
of tiny cubes and the acicular needles.
Most cuprite is a bright red color and has been known as ruby copper;
however, the crystals on my specimen are so dark red, and have such a bright
vitreous luster (hence the not so good photos), that the tiny crystals almost seem black until examined under
a microscope. Other specimens of cuprite
show up as globular or earthy masses.
These latter examples of cuprite then have an earthy dull luster. The cleavage is usually conchoidal and
cuprite is fairly soft at 3.5-4.0 (Mohs).
Twinning is common with penetration twins.
Photomicrograph of cuprite from Ray, AZ in the Cahn/Wulff collection. The red crystals (C) are cuprite as are the needle-like crystals. I believe the green (M) is probably malachite. Width FOV ~1 cm. |
One particular variety of cuprite is known as
chalcotrichite and is composed of fibrous mats of hair- or needle-like
elongated crystals. At times these hair-like crystals are scattered
among other cubes or octahedrons. In addition, down at Bisbee, Arizona, in the
Campbell Mine (1800-2300-foot level) the chalcotrichite masses are embedded in
white calcite along with some native copper and produces a lapidary stone known
as campbellite—the rock is hard enough to take a nice polish.
The cuprite specimen from the Cahn-Wulff collection
came from “Ray, Arizona” with no other specific locality information. I presume it was collected at what MinDat
terms the Ray Mine, Scott Mountain
area, Mineral Creek District (Ray District), Drippimg Springs Mts., Pinal Co. The
Ray mines have produced, since initial production in 1911, various amounts of
copper, silver, gold, zinc, lead, and molybdenum. Initially the target mineral was silver but
with better and newer mining techniques the mine began producing copper from one
of those low-grade porphyry deposits and after 1955 all mining was from a giant
open-pit. So large, in fact, the Mine
has consumed the original mining town of Ray.
A smelter was built at the nearby community of Hayden in 1910 and “the
Copper Basin Railway transports ore from the mine to the processing facilities…which
include a 27,400-ton-per-day concentrator and a 720,000-ton-per-year smelter,
where more than 380 tons of copper are refined every day to a purity of 99
percent” (Arizona Daily Star, Nov 11, 2013).
Several years ago I had the opportunity to collect at the mine and came
home with pieces of raw native copper and nice blue chrysocolla. In addition, after cleaning up a “piece of
copper”, I decided it was arborescent cuprite with small crystals and scattered
needles.
Mass of red cuprite crystals and a lesser number of needle-like cuprite crystals. Width ~1cm. |
As above, width ~1.4 cm. |
So, it was an enjoyable estate sale and I look forward
to studying my mineral acquisitions.
It's a bizarre but wonderful feeling, to arrive dead center of a target you didn't even know you were aiming for. L.M. Bujold
It's a bizarre but wonderful feeling, to arrive dead center of a target you didn't even know you were aiming for. L.M. Bujold
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