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Ch. 4: Quartz in Maine

Ch. 3: Economically important Pegmatite Minerals Page of 170 Ch. 4: Quartz in Maine Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
PEGMATITES AND ASSOCIATED ROCKS OP MAINE.              133
QUARTZ. GENERAL STATEMENT.
Quartz, the most abundant of all minerals, occurs in nature in a great variety of forms and is utilized commercially in many different ways. Sand consisting mainly of quartz is used for building, mold­ing, and in glass and pottery manufacture. Tripoli, used for abra­sive purposes, and sandstone and quartzite, used for building and other purposes, are also composed largely of quartz. The present discussion, however, deals only with the massive crystalline and gem varieties which occur in the pegmatite deposits.
Chemically pure quartz is an oxide of silicon of the formula SiO,. ' It is too hard to be scratched with a knife and will itself scratch glass. It is generally translucent to transparent and ranges from colorless to dark gray, and in the gem varieties from amethyst to pale pink. It is brittle and without well-defined cleavage, fracturing irregularly with lustrous glassy surfaces. Most of the quartz of the pegmatites occurs in large pure masses without crystal outline. Quartz with crystal form is developed principally in the pockets. The form of most of the crystals is that of a six-sided prism ter­minated by an equal number of faces forming a pyramid. The mineral is difficultly fusible and is unaffected by acids under ordi­nary conditions.
MASSIVE CRYSTALLINE QUARTZ.
Occurrence.—Massive crystalline quartz is usually white, but some is rose-colored or smoky. It occurs in veins or dikelike masses, unmixed with other minerals, or as a constituent of pegmatite. In the latter form it is usually produced as an accessory in the mining of feldspar. The States producing massive crystalline (vein) quartz in commercial quantity in 1908 were Connecticut, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Tennessee, Montana, Colorado, and Arizona. Small quantities were formerly marketed from Maine, but these quarries are so far from the principal markets that there is very little profit in handling the material. Quartz of excellent grade occurs in considerable quantities at nearly all of the feldspar quarries of Maine and in a few is saved, though not shipped regularly. It is allowed to accumulate in stock piles until a favorable sale can be made.
The Connecticut localities at which quartz is mined were described in detail in the writer's report on the production of quartz and feldspar in 1907.a The quarries of Westchester County, X. Y., have also been previously described by the writer.6
Milling.—In the grinding of the massive forms of quartz two general processes are used, the wet and the dry.
" Mineral Resources U. S. tor 1907, pt. 2, U. S. Geol. Survey, 190s, pp. 84G-S47. » Bull. U. S. Geol. Survey No. 315,1907, pp. 294-309.
Ch. 3: Economically important Pegmatite Minerals Page of 170 Ch. 4: Quartz in Maine
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