MINERALS INDEX

Actinolite

Albite

Allactite

Allanite

Amphibole Group

Andradite

Anglesite

Anhydrite

Anorthite

Apatite

ApatiteGroup

Apophyllite

Aragonite

Arsenates

Arsenides

Arseniosiderite

Arsenopyrite

Aurichalcite

Axinite

Azurite

Barite

Barylite

Barysilite

Bementite

Biotite

Borates

Bornite

Boroarsenates

Bustamite

Cahnite

Calamine

Calcite

Calcium larsenite

Carbonates

Celestite

Cerusite

Chalcocite

Chalcophanite

Chalcopyrite

Chloanthite

Chlorite

Chlorophoenicite

Chondrodite

Chysolite Group

Clinohedrite

Copper

Corundum

Corundum Group

Crocidolite

Cummingtonite

Cuprite

Cuspidine

Cyprine

Datolite

Desaulesite

Descloizite

Diopside

Dolomite

Edenite

Epidote

EpidoteGroup

FeldsparGroup

Ferroaxinite

Ferroschallerite

Fluoborite

Fluorite

Franklinite

Friedelite

Friedelite Group

Gageite

Gahnite

Galena

Ganophyllite

Garnet

Glaucochroite

Goethite

Graphite

Greenockite

Gypsum

Halloysite

Haloids

Hancockite

Hardystonite

Hastingsite

Hedyphane

Hematite

Hetaerolite

Heulandite

Hodgkinsonite

Holdenite

Humite Group

Hyalophane

Hydrohetaerolite

Hydrozincite

Ilmenite

Jeffersonite

Kentrolite

Larsenite

Lead

Leucaugite

Leucophoenicite

Limonite

Lollingite

Loseyite

Magnesium- chlorophoenicite

Magnetite

Malachite

Manganbrucite

Manganite

Manganosite

Marcasite

Margarosanite

Mcgovernite

Mica Group

Microcline

Millerite

Molybdenite

Mooreite

Muscovite

Nasonite

Native Elements

Neotocite

Niccolite

Norbergite

Oxides

Pargasite

Pectolite

Phlogopite

Phosphates, Arsenates and Vanadates

Prehnite

Psilomelane

Pyrite

Pyrochroite

Pyroxene Group

Pyrrhotite

Quartz

Rhodochrosite

Rhodonite

Roeblingite

Roepperite

Rutile

Scapolite

Schallerite

Schefferite

Serpentine

Serpentine Group

Siderite

Silicates

Silver

Smithsonite

Sphalerite

Spinel

Spinel Group

Stilbite

Sulphates

Sulphides and Arsenides

Sussexite

Svabite

Talc

Tennantite

Tephroite

Thomsonite

Thorite

Titanite

Tourmaline

Tremolite and Actinolite

Unconfirmed Species

Vanadates

Vesuvianite

Willemite

Xonotlite

Zeolites

Zinc schefferite

Zincite

Zircon

Zoisite

 

Jeffersonite

Habit
Jeffersonite is found in large crystals of simple habit, some more than 12 inches long and many doubly terminated. It occurs also in granular and platy masses. Contact twins on the orthopinacoid are not rare, and some lamellar twins on that plane give a good parting.

Figure 77
Crystal of jeffersonite showing the b(010), a(100), m(110) and s(111). Sterling Hill.
fig77.gif (8937 bytes)
fig78.gif (5344 bytes) Figure 78
Crystal of jeffersonite twinned on the orthopinacoid, showing the forms of figure 77. Sterling Hill.

Lamellar twinning on the base with perfect parting is the rule. There is a poor cleavage parallel to the prism and in traces parallel to the clinopinacoid. The hardness is 5.5, and the specific gravity is 3.55 to 3.63. The color is dark olive-green to brown and on weathered surfaces is gray to chocolate-brown and black. The mineral is translucent and in thin section is yellowish.

Optical properties
The jeffersonite of analysis no. 7 is optically biaxial and positive; 2V = 74° (on Fedorov stage); Z /\ c = 55° ; r < v (easily perceptible); an optic axis emerges from the basal parting. a = 1.713, b = 1.722, g = 1.745, all ±0.003. Pleochroism: X and Y = olive-green, Z = brownish-green (Berman).

Composition
Analyses 6 and 7 (see page 62) show the composition of a pyroxene containing manganese, zinc, and iron in different proportions in addition to calcium and a little magnesium. Jeffersonite is distinguished from schefferite by the presence of zinc and of more than traces of iron.

Occurrence
Jeffersonite is abundant, both in the pegmatite and in the contact deposits in the limestone. At Franklin it was found chiefly in granular form as the principal dark mineral of the pegmatite dikes at the Trotter mine and at the Parker shaft. It was also abundant in limestone in those mines, near pegmatite contacts, either in coarse granular masses or in rude crystals isolated in the limestone, commonly with garnet, rhodonite, microcline, franklinite, and gahnite. The striking characteristics of jeffersonite are its dark-green color, its vitreous to greasy luster, and its brilliant basal parting.

A rare mode of occurrence of jeffersonite was observed in the veins containing hetaerolite and hodgkinsonite, described on page 49, where it forms a matrix for those minerals and where its dark color caused it to be mistaken at first for a manganese oxide such as hetaerolite.

At Sterling Hill jeffersonite is one of the most typical minerals of the contact deposits about the pegmatite. Thence came the abundant crystals, many of them large and doubly terminated, that early drew attention to the species. Plate 8, A, shows one of unusual size.

Figure 79
Crystal of jeffersonite showing the forms b(010), a(100), m(110), z(021), p(101), s(111) and o(221). Sterling Hill.
fig79.gif (7355 bytes)

Most of the crystals are deeply pitted or have rounded edges and a dull coating of altered material. They were found in limestone pockets or in the residual clay of the limestone, with dysluite (gahnite), garnet, and apatite. The pegmatite also contains jeffersonite along with black manganiferous hornblende, and much of the jeffersonite contains grains of galena and sphalerite.

Alteration
Crystals of dark-brown jeffersonite, perfectly preserved in form but as light as pith and showing a porous texture when broken, were once very abundant at Sterling Hill. To them Koenig (117) gave the provisional name "anomalite" but without publishing any exact description of the analyzed material. He regarded the material as being the last stage of the alteration of jeffersonite and stated that it consists of iron and manganese hydroxides with small amounts of cobalt and nickel. The name referred to its supposed anomalous behavior when dissolved in a borax bead—the red color that should have been given by the manganese oxide being neutralized by the nickel and cobalt oxides, so that the bead was colorless. No further analytical study of these pseudomorphs has been made.

In the Hancock collection is a specimen of jeffersonite of ordinary crystal form and dull luster showing patches of jet-black hornblende with brilliant facets, embedded in but not projecting above the pyroxene surface. The mineral appears to be the result of alteration to amphibole, but it has not been more closely studied.

Historical notes
Jeffersonite was first described from Sterling Hill by Vanuxem and Keating (8), who named it for President Jefferson. They gave analyses and recognized it as a pyroxene, but they had no crystals and could not prove its relation to augite. That was done in the following year by Troost (13), who gave figures of the crystals and showed their pyroxene nature. He described the abundance of the mineral at Sterling Hill in the pegmatite and in the contact ore deposits. The paper by Troost is of much interest to American mineralogists as being among the first published in this country treating of crystallography and giving crystal figures. Seybert (19) also gave an analysis and confirmed the pyroxenic nature of jeffersonite. These early analyses are too poor to justify republication here.

The variable but never-failing content of zinc in this pyroxene throughout its wide range of occurrence in the deposits marks it as a distinct variety. Also it is a very characteristic member of the contact zones of the district.

 


 
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