Rock & Gem

Choosing What to Collect

- Bob Jones holds the Carnegie Mineralogi­cal Award, is a member of the Rockhound Hall of Fame and has been writing for Rock & Gem since its inception.

Beginner collectors quickly realize there are two problems in our hobby; too many minerals and too few dollars. To most of us, these problems never go away. We simply adjust or accommodat­e them. My answer was to specialize in what I collected. I could not collect worldwide species and keep the quality I wanted. I narrowed my focus to two localities, Mexico and Arizona. I chose Mexico because it produces quantities of good minerals and I live next to it in Arizona. I also emphasized collecting two species, copper and lead, so common in these localities. I also preferred miniatures as the smaller size was often less costly.

COLLECTING CALCITE

Calcite may be a great way to start collecting. By choosing calcite it may seem simple, but it can be as complicate­d as you want to make it. You may discover a whole range of mineralogi­cal and historical studies if you so choose. You may not realize it, but calcite is the gateway to collecting many other species. It’s a great way to learn about crystal forms and the conditions where they develop. Studying calcite is the first step in understand­ing the world of mineralogy and a whole series of attractive and popular species.

ABOUT CALCITE

Calcite is one of a group of related minerals. Calcite is calcium carbonate but so is aragonite. Aragonite and calcite are polymorphs meaning they have the same chemical elements, calcium and the carbonate radical. The difference is in their crystal habit and form. Aragonite crystals are orthorhomb­ic. Calcite is hexagonal. Normally they look different one from the other but Mother

Nature is not so simple. Both can develop as crystals that are rhombic which looks like a slanted box lacking right angles. You can not tell the difference. To make things more complicate­d, Mother Nature can change aragonite crystals internally. Heat an aragonite rhombic crystal to about 300°F and the internal structure changes to hexagonal calcite but keeps the original outer shape.

TEMPERATUR­E & PRESSURE

This brings up the effects temperatur­e and pressure can have on crystal growth. At ambient pressures and temperatur­es that we normally enjoy, calcite forms in the familiar scalemohed­ral or dog tooth crystals. These are slender crystals that terminate to a sharp point. Dogtooth calcites are common in sedimentar­y rocks where temperatur­es and pressures are what we experience each day. As rains fall, particular­ly acid rains, they absorb calcium carbonate and when these solutions settle in sedimentar­y rocks, dogtooth calcite crystals may form. As developing crystals form deep in the earth, they are subjected to high heat and pressure and crystals develop more complicate­d forms like rhombs or hexagons with rhombic terminatio­ns. Within limits, you can tell something about what the conditions were like where the crystals formed. Fluorite does the same thing. We find lovely cubes in the sedimentar­y rocks of the midwest. In the deep hydrotherm­al sulfide deposits in China, Germany and elsewhere, fluorite crystals develop a wide range of forms with some crystals having as many as 48 faces.

SUPERIOR, ARIZONA

On one of my undergroun­d visits, I was in the metal mine at Superior, Arizona. At a depth of 4800 feet, the rock wall was about 148°F and pressures were up. The calcites found in this mine were wonderful complex rhombs, often twinned with curving modified faces. They were completely different from dogtooth calcite crystals found on the surface in Arizona. Because of the dramatic difference­s in crystal forms, members of this group are

in a subsystem, trigonal, which has been added to explain their common rhombic form. Another name assigned to this group is rhombohedr­al since they all can form rhombic crystals.

IMPROVING YOUR COLLECTION

By choosing one mineral to concentrat­e on, you can improve the quality of your collection which is more important than quantity. You can also study an area more efficientl­y and in greater depth. You’ll find yourself becoming more interested in the history of certain localities, mines or countries.

COLLECTING BY LOCALITY

Collectors that choose to focus on a locality rather than a mineral, tend toward the better-known sources. My son Evan has studied the history, geology and mineralogy of Bisbee because of his interest in copper minerals. If you hand him a specimen from Bisbee, the first thing he does is look at the matrix, not the crystals. It is the matrix that tells you the circumstan­ces and geology of where and how the specimen developed. He can usually tell you where the specimen came from and maybe even the level in that mine where it formed.

LOCALITY ADVANTAGES

The advantage of collecting a locality is that it gives you a broader subject with a greater variety of minerals, mining techniques and environmen­tal effects. You will get into the history related to the deposit, when it was found and by whom. Among the localities, collectors usually pick deposits that have been exceptiona­lly fruitful for specimens. Most popular are Bisbee, Cornwall, England, Michigan copper deposits, the Tristate area in the Midwest, the gem pegmatite deposits of Maine, California, Tsumeb, Namibia and the gem pegmatites in Brazil. I had a particular interest in an old French copper mine in Chessy, France. Historical­ly, Chessy produced superb copper species like cuprite, azurite and malachite. In its heyday, Chessy was also a major source of azurite that was crushed to make blue pigment for the artists in Europe. Your interest in minerals will take you into all sorts of other subjects once you get started. Think of the many opportunit­ies that will expand your interests and open your mind to the amazing world of mineral collecting. It’s a great hobby!

Calcite may be a great way to start collecting. By choosing calcite it may seem simple, but it can be as complicate­d as you want to make it. You may discover a whole range of mineralogi­cal and historical studies if you so choose.”

 ?? ?? Azurite was an uncommon copper mineral in Corwall and Rashleigh had a good example.
Azurite was an uncommon copper mineral in Corwall and Rashleigh had a good example.
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