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136               GEOLOGY OF NEW YORK CITY
line passing like a blade through its exact center. Mr. Niven secured some excellent large crystals northward and west. Do-decahedral garnets seem uncommon on the island. Drift arkose from New Jersey sometimes contains garnets of a simple type, greenish or black.
Graphite.—Mr. F. A. Camp reports this somewhat unusual mineral from I52d Street west of 7th Avenue. Robinson and Bailey have both found it.
Gypsum, found in the Chamberlin collection as a net-work of white crystals on gneiss.
A group of minerals known as Zeolites, from their swelling and ebullition under heat, and all containing considerable per­centages of water, and generally silicates of calcium or barium and aluminum, are represented in the island rock in four species: Stilbite, Harmotome, Chabazite, and Heulandite. These minerals are the products of alteration, and they appear upon the faces of the gneiss in crevices or exposures, where a gradual transference to the surface has slowly formed them. In their most characteristic condition they are white, but the island ex­amples are brown to yellow, gray and red, and are deservedly admired.
They have been almost limited in their most handsome exam­ples to the rocks excavated in the 4th Avenue improvement, where the tracks of the Central, Hudson River Railroad, Harlem and Hartford Railroads were first sunk below grade.
In mentioning them Mr. Chamberlin, who himself first an­nounced harmotome, describes their aggregate appearance under stilbite. He says: " Seven localities on New York Island have yielded this interesting zeolite, chief of which is Harlem Tunnel and vicinity, where the minerals associated with heulandite, harmotome, and chabazite appeared in a series of pockets and veins, running northeastward from 4th Avenue to I02d Street near Lexington Avenue. The stilbite, usually of a honey-yellow color, appeared in columnar, scopiform (broom-shaped), sheaf-like, and radiated masses, but rarely, as at Bergen Hill, in lamellar sections of crystals. Some of the globular groups approached a bright red in color, affording a pleasing contrast to the yellow hue of simpler forms adjacent. Among radiated forms one specimen is nearly fifteen inches square, containing twenty-six rosettes. At 45th Street between 1st and 2d Avenues, a second prolific locality afforded plates of stilbite two feet square."
Harmotome, hydrous silicate of aluminum, barium, and po-