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Margarosanite

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 Pb(Ca,Mn)2Si3O9

Margarosanite is a rare mineral found at Franklin, but not Sterling Hill. It fluoresces a beautiful bright blue-white under short-wave ultraviolet light.

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Daylight view

Margarosanite, in lamellar masses, fluorescing bright blue-white under short-wave UV. Franklin, NJ. Width 10 cm.

Samples are generally of one of two types: diffuse (and invisible in daylight) disseminations within feldspar, or as coarsely crystalline blades and plates. Specimens of the later habit are particularly prized locally. In some cases, such margarosanite plates may fluoresce with an anomalous pinkish color.

Masses of coarsely crystalline plates up to 4 cm across are known. Such samples came from a restricted occurrence in the northern part of the Franklin mine. These samples of platy margarosanite are included in what is today referred to as "Parker shaft minerals" by local mineral collectors.

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Daylight view

Margarosanite and wollastonite, fluorescing bright blue-white and orange, respectively, under short-wave UV. Franklin, NJ. Width 11 cm.

Some samples of platy margarosanite contain associated secondary fluorescent wollastonite and willemite. Others may contain minehillite or other ill-defined, fine-grained fluorescent minerals that can make very attractive fluorescent specimens.

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Daylight view

Margarosanite and wollastonite, detail from above sample. Some plates of margarosanite have a pinkish cast. Franklin, NJ. Width 4 cm.

Be sure to visit the photo page taken under shortwave ultraviolet light.

For more information on margarosanite, see Dunn (1995) and Palache (1935).

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