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


Sulfides

ACANTHITE

ARSENOPYRITE

BORNITE

CARROLLITE

CHALCOCITE

CHALCOPYRITE

COVELLITE

DIGENITE

DJURLEITE

GALENA

GERSDORFFITE

GREENOCKITE

HAWLEYITE

MARCASITE

MOLYBDENITE-2H

PYRITE

PYRRHOTITE

SPHALERITE

STIBNITE

WURTZITE


Arsenides and antimonides

BREITHAUPTITE

CUPROSTIBITE

DOMEYKITE

LOELLINGITE

NICKELINE

PARARAMMELSBERGITE

RAMMELSBERGITE

REALGAR

SAFFLORITE

SKUTTERUDITE


Sulfosalts

BAUMHAUERITE

BERTHIERITE

SELIGMANNITE

TENNANTITE

TETRAHEDRITE

ZINKENITE

ZINKENITE

Pb9Sb22S42
Hexagonal

 
 
 
  Figure 21-40. Opaque area is a zinkenite-quartz boudin in calcite (white) with indiscernible realgar, from the 900 level at Sterling Hill. The visible surface is polished. Specimen is 12 cm in maximum dimension. Privately owned. Photo by the author.  
   

Zinkenite, a lead antimony sulfide mineral, was found on the 900 level at Sterling Hill in the early 1990’s. It is black, opaque, and occurs associated with quartz in 5-30-cm boudins within calcite (Figure 21-40), in a part of the mine which was host to seligmannite and other sulfosalts. Criddle and Stanley (1993) reported it to contain Sb 43.6, Pb, 33.2, S 21.9, Cu 0.6, total = 99.3 wt.%, and they provided reflectance data.

Part of the material referred to by Palache (1941b) as “needles of an antimony compound” was found by the writer to be zinkenite; see also berthierite.

 

FOOTER LBI

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

 

CHAPTER 21. SULFIDES, ARSENIDES, ANTIMONIDES, AND SULFOSALTS