FRANKLIN AND STERLING HILL NEW JERSEY: THE WORLD'S MOST MAGNIFICENT MINERAL DEPOSITS
HOME MINERAL INDEX SEARCH LINKS BIBLIOGRAPHY INTRODUCTION CULTURAL ASPECTS LOCAL GEOLOGY GEOLOGY OF THE ZINC DEPOSITS
GEOCHEMISTRY FLUORESCENCE THE MINERAL ASSEMBLAGES LISTS OF MINERALS DESCRIPTIVE MINERALOGY NESOSILICATES
SOROSILICATES AND CYCLOSILICATES INOSILICATES PHYLLOSILICATES TECTOSILICATES AND SILICATES OF UNKNOWN STRUCTURE
ELEMENTS SULFIDES ARSENIDES ANTIMONIDES AND SULFOSALTS OXIDES AND HYDROXIDES HALIDES AND CARBONATES
SULFATES BORATES TUNGSTATES AND MOLYBDATES ARSENATRES ARSENIDES PHOSPHATES AND VANADATES UNNAMED MINERALS


The halides

ATACAMITE

FLUORITE


The carbonates


The calcite group

CALCITE

OTAVITE

RHODOCHROSITE

SIDERITE

SMITHSONITE


The dolomite group

DOLOMITE

KUTNAHORITE


Other carbonates

ARAGONITE

AURICHALCITE

AZURITE

CANAVESITE

CERUSSITE 

DYPINGITE

HYDROTALCITE

HYDROZINCITE

LOSEYITE

MALACHITE

MONOHYDROCALCITE

PYROAURITE

ROSASITE

SCLARITE

SJÖGRENITE

STRONTIANITE

ZNUCALITE

CERUSSITE 

PbCO3 
Orthorhombic

 
 
 
  Figure 23-19. Crystal drawing of cerussite from Sterling Hill. Drawing is from Palache (1935) who provided crystallographic data.  
   

Cerussite, a lead carbonate mineral, was reported by Palache (1935) who illustrated the fine crystals found at Sterling Hill (Figures 23-19 and 23-20). Cerussite has not been reported from Franklin. Few observations have been made; no chemical or physical data exist. Bostwick (1982) reported a moderate yellow fluorescence in longwave ultraviolet.

The reported crystalline cerussite from Sterling Hill occurs as an alteration of galena. Other occurrences are known but not with certainty from the same paragenesis; these contain shards of titanite and an amphibole similar to hastingsite. Crystals from Sterling Hill, found within altered galena adjacent to the east limb in 1992, are up to 1 cm in size.

 
 
 
 

Figure 23-20. Crystal drawings of cerussite. The drawing at left is of a twinned crystal from Sterling Hill. The drawings at right are two projections (A and B) of one crystal fragment. Drawings are from Palache (1935) who provided crystallographic data.

 
   

 

FOOTER LBI

 
Copyright © 1995 by Pete J. Dunn
Website by Herb Yeates
 
Link to homepage
This page created: January 11, 2001

 

CHAPTER 23. HALIDES AND CARBONATES