MINERALS INDEX
Corundum |
| Al2O3 |
| Hexagonal-rhombohedral |
Forms
c(0001), a(1120), r(1011), d1(0112), h(0111), n(2243), and k
(7.7.14.6).
| Forms | Illustrations | |
| 1 | c, r, k | Figure 27 |
| 2 | c, a, r, d1, n | Figure 28 |
| 3 | c, a, r, d1, n, k | Figure 30 |
| 4 | c, a, r, h, n, k | Figure 29 |
Habit
Corundum is found in crystals, more or less perfectly developed, some of them
5 inches long; the pyramidal and prismatic habits are about equally common.
It also occurs in rounded grains without recognizable faces.
| Figure
27 End of prismatic crystal of corundum showing c(0001), a(1120), r(1011), d1(0112), and n(2243). Furnace quarry, Franklin. |
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Figure
28 Barrel-shaped crystal of corundum showing the forms c(0001), r(1011), and k(7.7.14.6). Calamine pit, Sterling Hill. |
Occurrence
Corundum does not occur in association with the zinc ores but is widely
distributed in isolated pockets in the Franklin limestone. The principal
localities for the mineral in Sussex County are not in the Franklin district.
In the pockets the corundum is associated with one or more of the minerals
spinel, rutile, graphite, edenite, pyroxene, garnet, titanite, and phlogopite.
In excavating in limestone for the foundation of the furnace on the west side of the pond at Franklin, a pocket was opened that contained many crystals of blue, gray, and red corundum, some of them transparent and very sharply crystallized. With the corundum were phlogopite, spinel, rutile, and marcasite, but the marcasite crumbled soon after exposure. Similar blue and gray corundum crystals, like those shown in Plate 4, B, were obtained from a pocket near the limestone quarry of the Franklin Iron Company.
| Figure
29 End of prismatic crystal of corundum showing the forms c(0001), a(1120), n(2243), k(7.7.14.6), r(1011), h(0111). Calamine pit, Sterling Hill. |
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Figure
30 End of prismatic crystal of corundum showing the forms c(0001), a(1120), n(2243), k(7.7.14.6), r(1011), d1(0112). Furnace quarry, Franklin. |
In pockets near the western border of the ore body of Sterling Hill and in the loose material from the stripping of the calamine pits were found good crystals of blue and red corundum associated with rutile. Many of these were found in washing the calamine ore for the removal of dirt and were doubtless derived from pockets in the neighboring limestone. An irregular chain of pockets containing corundum is said to have extended from Sterling Hill to Franklin.
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Website
© by Herb Yeates 1997-2001.
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This
page created: January 12, 2001 5:56 PM
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