Monday, February 23, 2015

PARATACAMITE: TUCSON GEM SHOW REPORT: THE END




Lots of petrified wood, including some large polished slabs.
Multi-colored Banded Iron Formation from Australia.  Red and yellow jasper and chert and black hematiteSpecimen width is about35 cm.


I spent my last day at the 2015 Tucson Shows by heading back to the Main Street venues perusing the many small tents and stands selling a variety mineral specimens, petrified wood, Indian zeolites, banded iron formation, Moroccan fossils, etc.  There were some beautiful polished jasper specimens and really large slabs of petrified wood from Madagascar.  I also enjoyed visiting with several owners of the smaller “mom & pop” operations.  One of the owners noted my continued interest in a flat of small spheres of paratacamite.  I engaged him in a fascinating conversation about collecting the specimens from Baja California [Santa Rosalia, Boleo District, Mun. de Mulege, Baja California Sur, Mexico].  MinDat lists 47 valid minerals collected from area mines and three type minerals with the best known being boleite.


The Boleo Mining District is unlike most metallic ore deposits in western North America in that it is a sediment-hosted copper-cobalt-zinc-manganese ore deposit. These sediment-hosted deposits are known as manto ore deposits.  In this situation the metallic minerals replace sedimentary rocks, commonly limestones, and form bodies along the bedding planes.  What is questionable is the source of the ore—does it come from a sedimentary source within the basin, or from an adjacent intrusive pluton?  Or perhaps the minerals came from badly weathered primary deposits?  Or are there other possibilities?

To my surprise, and gratefulness, the owner let me pick out any individual sphere I would like to take home.  Rockhounds, especially those of small shops, are generally a nice group of people.

Last fall I put out a posting (October 9, 2014) on atacamite, a copper++ chloride hydroxide [Cu2(OH)3Cl] that is usually a secondary mineral oxidized from other copper minerals and forms in arid and saline conditions.  Atacamite (Orthorhombic) is a polymorph (minerals with the same chemical composition but different crystal structures) of botallackite (Monoclinic), anatacamite (Triclinic) and clinoatacamite (Monoclinic).  At one time paratacamite was thought to also be a polymorph.  However, a recent study (Welch and others, 2014) noted that the crystal chemistry of paratacamite indicates the presence of zinc and/or magnesium and therefore dropped its designation as a polymorph.

Paratacamite [Cu3(Cu,Zn)(OH)6Cl2] looks quite similar to atacamite (at least to my untrained eye) so I asked the vendor how he knew it was the former rather than the latter?  He patiently explained that the nodules had been “x-rayed and confirmed to be paratacamite.”  That was good enough for me!  Later I noted MinDat had crossed atacamite off their Boleo District list and substituted paratacamite.

Crystals of the mineral is green to darker greenish-black, fairly soft at 3 (Mohs), have a vitreous luster, has some decent cleavage and a conchoidal fracture.  My specimen has very tiny crystals and it is quite difficult to observe specific physical characteristics.  So, I was really happy for the vendor’s identification.
A nodule of paratacamite (green) mixed with flakes of a light colored mineral, perhaps gypsum.  Width of nodule ~1.6 cm.

Photomicrograph of nodule section  above. Cluster of green paratacamite crystals ~4 mm.
In further reading, I learned that at times magnesium or nickel replaces the zinc and the mineral becomes paratacamite-(Mg) or paratacamite-(Ni). Welch and others (2014) noted that upon heating paratacamite reversibly transforms into herbertsmithite [Cu3Zn(OH)6Cl2] between 353 and 393 K.

REFERENCES CITED

Welch, M.D., Sciberras, M.J., Williams, P.A., Leverett, P., Schlüter, J., Malcherek, T., 2014, A temperature-induced reversible transformation between paratacamite and herbertsmithite: Physics and Chemistry of Minerals, 41, 33-48.
 


Friday, February 20, 2015

LAZULITE: TUCSON GEM SHOW: MAIN SHOW



In attending the Tucson “main show” I remained on a hunt for the best $5 mineral I could find at the venue.  Now, there are very few $5 minerals for sale in the Convention Center but there are numerous five figure minerals a buyer could take home!  But, the hunt is the fun part of the chase and I brought home some nice crystals of lazulite a magnesium, iron, aluminum phosphate [(Mg,Fe++)Al2(PO4)2(OH)2].  Lazulite is often a sky-blue to azure-blue color but my crystals are such a very deep blue or blackish-blue that the camera will not pick up such---as is the case for crystals collected at the well-known Rapid Creek locality in the Yukon, Canada. Crystals from Rapid Creek are stubby bipyramids, have a vitreous luster and are transparent to translucent.  On the Rapid Creek crystals a strong light will transmit through the specimens and produce the beautiful blue color.  Crystals are fairly hard at 5.5-6.0 (Mohs).
 
Bi-pyramidal crystals of deep blue to black-blue lazulite (L) and quartz (Q) collected from Rapid Creek, Yukon Territory, Canada. Width of specimen ~1.75 cm.
Luzulite is found in high grade metamorphic rocks where it is associated with kyanite, corundum, andalusite and others.  It also may be found in some massive hydrothermal pegmatites. The magnesium-rich lazulite is in a solid solution series with the iron end member scorzalite [(Fe++,Mg)Al2(OH,PO4)2].


Two photomicrographs picking up the dark blue color of lazulite crystals, each has a maximum width of ~ 3 mm.  Also present are tiny terminated quartz crystals.
It is easy to confuse lazulite with lazurite, a blue variety of the mineral Hauyne, a sodium-calcium tectosilicate with sulfur, sulfate and chloride.  Lazurite is found associated with pyrite in zones of contact metamorphism of limestone and is the major “blue” component of lapis lazuli (a mixture of lazurite, pyrite, calcite). 

In my hunt for the best $5 mineral at the different show venues, I sought advice from a friendly Arizona rattlesnake:
·       Be flexible
·       Keep a low profile
·       Think before you strike
·       Soak up some sun
·       Shed your old ways
·       Be thick skinned
·       Don’t get rattled

Thursday, February 19, 2015

TUCSON GEM SHOW: 2015 MAIN SHOW




Today, February 12, was the opening day of the 61st Tucson Gem & Mineral Show---the “main show”---held at the Tucson Convention Center.  The show theme for 2015, Minerals of Western Europe, brought a number of exhibitions featuring fine minerals from a variety of localities, as well as European dealers and their wares.  The following photos represent only a small portion of the many minerals in display exhibitions and dealer cases.


A Native American "Spirit Doll" with gemstone adornments.
Bowl: Brazilian agate, ca. 1970, Idar-Oberstein, Germany.
A great pyromorphite from the Las Ferges Mine, France.

A variety of specimens from localities in western Europe.
Great Norwegian silver from the famous Kongsburg District.

More silver from Kongsburg.
Mimetite from the Cumbria District, England.
Sulfur crystal from Sicily.

The star of the Show: topaz collected by Rich Fretterd (as seen on The Prospectors TV show) from pegmatites around Pike Peak.  The stone on the left is a piece of 1345.25 ct. billed as the largest faceted topaz from the USA.
More topaz from the Pikes Peak pegmatites.  For a great story, and many photos, of the topaz see www.spiriferminerals.com.
There is always gold at the Tucson Show.  This is the eight pound Thunderbolt collected from western Australia.
Beautiful rhodochrosite and fluorite from China.

Come to Arizona and see Bisbee azurite!
 


Brazilian amethyst and calcite in above three photos.  Spectacular.
The geode crackers are always popular.


I spent most of Thursday at the show and was simply overwhelmed, as usual, with the many cases and specimens.