Buffalo Paper - Hübnerite in Arizona

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 172 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1899
Abstract
The occurrence of the manganiferous variety of wolframite at a new locality in Arizona was announced in the month of May last." It occurs in the granite hills of the Dragoon mountains, in Cochise county, about 6 miles north of Dragoon Summit station, on the Southern Pacific Railway of Arizona. It is found in veins of white quartz, traversing a coarsely crystalline granitic gneiss, and, so far as yet determined, is without association with other metallic minerals in the same veins, except small quantities of scheelite. It is a very pure form of the mineral, and contains but little iron, the base being manganese oxide. The color is brownish-red; it is nearly the same as the color of the mineral originally described by E. Riotte from Mammoth District, Nevada.† Thin films or plates on the broad cleavage-surfaces, and thin cleavage-flakes, seen by transmitted light, are ruby-red, or rather more like the color of red zinc oxide or the mineral known as clintonite. By long-continued weathering the surface becomes less deeply colored, and assumes a bronze-like luster, like the dull oxidized surface of
Citation
APA:
(1899) Buffalo Paper - Hübnerite in ArizonaMLA: Buffalo Paper - Hübnerite in Arizona. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1899.