THE MINERAL
RAMMELSBERGITE



Rammelsbergite is a difficult mineral to distinguish from other nickel sulfides and related arsenides. Its unusually high hardness and silvery color helps, but mostly it is indistinguishable from many of them by ordinary methods. It had been reported to have been found at Franklin, New Jersey, but this may have been a misidentification with the mineral gersdorffite, a similar looking nickel arsenic sulfide.

Rammelsbergite is a rare mineral, but is found with other arsenides and thus it is included with them when mined for nickel and/or arsenic. It is a member of the Lollingite Group. The namesake of the group, lollingite is closely related, but has more iron than nickel in its chemistry. Another closely related mineral is saffloriite, which has more cobalt than nickel. The three minerals share the same basic structure and just differ by chemistry. The lollingite group is sometimes placed in the larger Marcasite Group.

Rammelsbergite lends it name to its dimorphic cousin, pararammelsbergite. A dimorph is a set of two minerals that share the same chemistry, but have different structures. Pararammelsbergite has monoclinic symmetry, while rammelsbergite's is orthorhombic, (the prefix para just means "similar to...").

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS:

 

Google
 

Copyright ©1995-2007 by Amethyst Galleries, Inc.
Site design & programming by galleries.com web services