TUCSON GEM AND MINERAL SHOW: 2018
The” granddaddy” of the Tucson
venues is the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show® finishing off a spectacular two
weeks. I usually attend the opening day
(February 8, 2018) and the crowd was large and the displays spectacular. The Show, as do most club shows, features both guest
display/competitive cases of minerals, and booths occupied by several hundred dealers (~250). A big difference between TGMS, and a local
show such as CSMS, is that high-end dealers from around the word bring their
finest specimens to Tucson. The prices
for these museum-quality specimens ranges into 7 figures (and are usually marked
POR, price on request). However, just
ogling at these one-of-a-kind mineral specimens is well worth the entire trip
to Tucson.
It also should be noted that TGMS
sponsors several lectures and symposia throughout the week and these are free
to the public (admission charge for the other parts of the Show). There is a Saturday night program with a
silent auction, buffet dinner, an awards ceremony, slide competition awards,
and a voice auction. On Thursday the
Micromount Room was open and Friday brings the Author Roe Memorial Micromount
Symposium.
Since it is really tough to write
much about the TGMS, most of this article is composed of photographs. But remember: 1) the Show is overwhelming
with the number of exhibits and cases; 2) virtually every mineral is behind
glass and that fact affects photographs.
A single row of dealers in the
Exhibition Hall (contains both dealers [minerals, books and jewelry] and the
display cases). The Arena section is
another part of the Convention Center houses ~100 mostly jewelry dealers.
Legrandite, a hydrated zinc arsenate, is
one of my favorite minerals. This
specimen was provided by the Miner’s Lunchbox and collected from Level 7, Saint
Judas Chimney, Ojuela Mine, Mapimi, Durango, Mexico. One could purchase the specimen for $35,000.
Gold is always a popular element/mineral at the
Tucson Show. The lower photo is from The
Collectors Edge in Golden, CO. and has a Price-on -Request note, POR). The upper photo of gold is courtesy of the
Miners Lunchbox and is POR.
This
amazing specimen (~3 feet in length) of gypsum v. selenite (hydrated calcium
sulfate) greeted visitors near one of the entrances. POR with a phone number and from China
(where?).
Not
all booths had minerals “for sale.” Rock
of Ages had a wide variety of mining paraphernalia for buyers.
Like
agates? Look no further than this giant,
polished Laguna agate, from the Alianza Claim, Estacion Ojo Laguna, Chihuahua,
Mexico.
I
kept thinking about the number of rings available from “The Largest American
Turquoise” taken by Jack Wigley from the Mona Lisa Mine on Little Porter
Mountain, Polk County Arkansas.
Unfortunately,
readers cannot read the print from this photo; however, I stared at the display
for a long time trying to gather facts about twinning in minerals. The display
was constructed by the American Museum of Natural History.
Here
is another quite informative poster from the Smithsonian Institution National
Museum of Natural History.
And
finally, the third informative poster that I studied in detail—Classes of
Mineral Symmetry.
This
image should be recognizable to readers of the Pick & Pack: microcline v. amazonite (potassium feldspar)
and quartz v. smoky from the White Cap Pocket, Smoky Hawk Claim, Teller County,
Colorado. Display by Collectors Edge.
Pseudomorph
of agate (silicon dioxide chalcedony?) after aragonite (calcium carbonate). Collected from Rancho Coyamito Norte,
Chihuahua, Mexico.
I
thought this was a beautiful display of turquoise (copper aluminum hydrated
phosphate) jewelry.
This
is an interesting display of German minerals and German mugs (with a mines
motif).
This
is an interesting specimen of stibnite, an antimony sulfide. There was no listed locality information, but
I am guessing Romania.
This
case was a fabulous display featuring a variety of agates. One must read the small locality slips in
order to get more complete information but what an interesting case.
These
two photos present one of my favorite minerals—amber barite (barium sulfate)
collected from concretions in the Pierre Shale (Cretaceous) along Elk Creek in
western South Dakota. My collected
specimens are not nearly as impressive. The upper photo also has yellow calcite
crystals. Both specimens are courtesy of
The Collectors Edge.
The
Collectors Edge displayed this beautiful specimen of zoisite v. tanzanite
(calcium aluminum hydroxyl sorosilicate) from Tanzania. Rhodochrosite
(manganese carbonate) from the Sweet Home Mine near Alma, Colorado, is in the
background.
Specimens
of the Tourmaline Group were in several displays and included ilvaite above and
elbaite below.
I
talked to CSMS member Jack T. and was informed that he and Kaye had a
competitive case of pyrite. Was this
their case?
I could have inserted a gazillion more photos; however, the attention span of most persons just wanders, and their eyes begin to water, after watching and reading so much of my chatter. So, I leave you with a pleasing sunset view from the campground--west escarpment of the Superstition Mountains..