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Snow hit and covered the Catalina Mountains at Tucson. |
The weather in Arizona is getting weird
again. In past days I have been wet/damp
several times visiting outdoor shows and wading in the mud while looking for
goodies at various Tucson venues. Now the Catalina
Mountains are white from a snow fall, almost reaching my camp site. But most locals are very happy with the
moisture due to a two-decade drought.
My first stop of the day was at a small venue
where a dealer/organization was selling of part of Rock Currier’s
collection. Mr. Currier was a well know collector
and wholesaler for over 40 years. He also
faithfully served MinDat as an advisor/manager and “expert” until his
unexpected death in 2015.
According to MinDat, Mr. Currier gave
a collection of ~5000 rare/systematic minerals to the University of Arizona
while retaining a personal collection of 6000+ micromounts and ~9000 other
specimens. He also uploaded about ~9000
photos to MinDat. WOW.
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A partial case of the Currier Collection. |
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Slab of "stalactite rhodochrosite" collected from Argentina priced at $8000. |
I knew that I could not afford any
of his specimens but just wanted to take a peek at some “nice ones.” Although many specimens had been sold before arrival,
I was able to observe perhaps the finest specimen of malachite that I have ever
observed. All proceeds from this sale go
to the Rock Currier Living Trust.
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A slab of Congo malachite from the Currier collection. |
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Wading through the water at a flooded Tucson show. |
So now it was off to the Hotel
Tucson City Center (officially the Arizona
Mineral and Fossil Show at HTCC) where I ended up wading across water from the
storm! Most of the activity at this
large show is centered in the interior court yard with major displays in the lobby,
ballroom and then two levels of motel rooms surrounding the center court. It consumes the better part of a day to visit
each vendor, many of whom have been in the same/similar location for years.
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A plant branch 58" x 32" collected from the Green River Formation (Tertiary: Eocene). Price $28,000. |
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I did renew my subscription and picked up a couple of older issues. |
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Late Pennsylvanian (~305 Ma) amphibian Brachydectes collected Bernalillo County, New Mexico by Badlands Scientific Expedition LLC. |
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Mr. Walrus, Pleistocene ~18k BP, not collected in Kansas. Show price $14,500. |
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Late Cretaceous mosasaur skull. |
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A nice cephalopod in a concretion. I have never experienced the joy of finding anything like this! |
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Placenticeras meeki, Late Cretaceous cephalopod, Pierre Shale, South Dakota. Note the suture lines used in identification. |
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These large Late Cretaceous cephalopods are collected in Alberta, Canada, and the source of the semi-gem ammolite. |
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Walk careful in the court yard. |
In addition, there are additional vendors
along Granada Ave. near the motel.
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This is a mighty large amethyst concretion. |
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Many more smaller cathedrals. |
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I just have problems believing the cathedrals are rare and extreme. In my stay in Tucson I saw thousands of the buggers. |
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Crystalline sulfur, Sol de Namana, Bolivia. |
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Inside the Minerama (France) tent. |
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Fleur D'Amethyste, Rio Grande de Sul, Brazil. Each about $500-$650. |
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Amethyst, Santa Cruz Department, Bolivia. |
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A carved hatchling. |
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Smoky Alligator Quartz, Minas Gerais Brazil. |
My major find at the City Center was
a specimen of wulfenite collected from the Red Cloud Mine in Arizona (La Paz
County, southwest), perhaps the most famous wulfenite specimen collecting
locality in the U.S. Red Cloud wulfenite
has been valued by collectors for decades as “crystals from the mine were
marketed worldwide by A.E. Foote as early as the 1880s” (Bladh, 2019). In addition, the 2019 January/February issue
of Rocks and Minerals ( a special
show edition on wulfenite) chose a red Cloud wulfenite for their front cover;
the specimen was later exhibited at the Main Show.
There have been numerous articles written
about Red Cloud collectable specimens, especially in popular journals such as Rocks and Minerals, Rocks and Gems and The Mineralogical
Record. The mine did produce polymetallic
ore (the most important being silver, lead and minor gold); however, Red Cloud,
in recent decades, has always been known for wulfenite specimens.
According to an article on the
Collectors Edge website (2019) the real impetus for collecting wulfenite at the
Red Cloud was due to CSMS Charter Member Edwin Over who, working alone in 1938,
produced “some of the most beautiful wulfenite specimens ever seen.” After his discovery large numbers of
collectors begin trekking to this isolated mine to try and nab some of these
fantastic specimens. Over the years ownership
of the mine, via Patented Claim I presume, changed hands numerous times. Some prospectors were successful while others
failed. Finally, in 2000 Colorado Calumet
Co, Inc., owned by Bryan Lees of Collectors Edge acquired the property and
began to enlarge the small open pit so that prospecting could once again start
for wulfenite crystals. The crew was
able to locate “several magnificent crystal-lined fractures and pockets…that
contained incredibly gemmy, brilliant, and deep orange-red wulfenite crystals…”
(Collectors Edge, 2019). Colorado
Calumet Co, Inc. terminated the operation, shut down mining, reclaimed the site,
and sold it in 2003. However, I hear
rumors that a pay fee site is operating on the mine dumps. Don’t know.
For a more detailed history of collecting at Red Cloud see the article
listed in References Cited.
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The above five photomicrographs are of clusters of wulfenite crystals from the Red Cloud Mine. The Mine is famous for the carmine red color crystals (high dollar specimens) but also produce orange to orange-red crystals. In fact, many of the above crystals are more red than appearance. Width FOV ~ 1.0 cm. |
As I noted in previous postings, wulfenite
is a lead molybdate, [Pb(MoO4)], famous for its common habit of
forming thin tabular crystals, often transparent (but ranging to opaque), that
occur in various shades of orange to red to yellow (uncommon as green or brown
or blueish or black) (see Posting April 20, 2017); “butterscotch” is a common
color descriptor. There is some
disagreement about the color changes although minor chromium probably acts as a
red or yellow chromophore. Crystals
often have a vitreous luster and will easily reflect light as a mirror. Others are much “duller” and have a resinous
luster; some are covered by various druzes.
The streak is a nondescript white. Wulfenite is quite soft at ~3.0
(Mohs) and the crystals are brittle.
Besides the thin tabs, pyramidal (and bipyramids) and stubby crystals
are common and often confuse new collectors who are used to orange or yellow
tabs.
Wulfenite is a secondary mineral
deposited in the oxidized zone of lead ores; it seems particularly common in
the state of Arizona and Bladh (2019) noted at least 275 collecting
localities. Although collectors love isolated
and single crystals, the vast majority of
wulfenite probably occurs as granular or intermixed masses.
REFERENCES CITED
Bladh, K., 2019, Arizona
Wulfenite: Rocks and Minerals, v. 94, no. 1.
The
Collector’s Edge, 2019, Red Cloud Mine, La Paz County, Arizona, USA: https://collectorsedge.com/pages/red-cloud-mine-la-paz-county-arizona-usa.