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Ch. 3: Precious Gem stones in 1907

Ch. 3: Precious Gem stones in 1907 Page of 76 Ch. 3: Precious Gem stones in 1907 Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
PRECIOUS STONES.                                        801
in a plastic condition. Veinlets of quartz in the original rock have been folded and crumpled during this compression into forms resem­bling folded ribbon. The country rock in the neighborhood of the veins has been highly silicified by the addition of much quartz. This quartz along with other minerals, as muscovite, rutile, pyrite, etc., has replaced the biotite and feldspars and other minerals of the country rock. This replacement was later than the compression of the rock and about contemporaneous with the deposition of the vein matter. These phases are beautifully illustrated in hand specimens which show typical biotite gneiss with folded quartz veins, several feet from a vein, and in similar rock, highly silicified, with a portion of the vein-filling adhering. In the latter specimen the vein filling a fissure is glassy quartz with calcite, rutile, and pyrite inclusions. The wall next to the vein consists largely of granular quartz and an emerald-green (chrome) muscovite, with a little rutile and pyrite. At about 1 inch from the vein the replacement of the country rock is not so com­plete, and biotite becomes gradually prominent in the rock. At 2 inches from the vein the rock is nearly black biotite gneiss, rich in quartz. A folded quartz veinlet cuts the gneiss to the vein wall. It is more prominent in the black gneiss than in the highly replaced gneiss, though it can readily be traced through the latter, since the quartz of which it is composed was not so easily replaced as certain constituents of the gneiss. Some of the rock cut by the veins con­tains much chlorite and has a yellowish-green color.
The material filling the gem-bearing veins consists of quartz, cal­cite, dolomite, muscovite, rutile, black tourmaline, aquamarine and emerald beryl, hiddenite, pyrite, chalcopyrite, and monazite. All of the veins in the neighborhood do not contain all of these minerals, but each of the numerous veins exposed in the workings contain some or all of them. In the cavities all of these minerals occur in crystals; in solid-vein matter certain ones only have crystal form. The calcite was introduced after the other minerals had been deposited, in many places filling up previously existing cavities. Crystals of the other minerals are embedded in solid calcite veins, and calcite has been deposited between broken fragments of beryl and other crystals. Rutile suitable for cutting is plentiful in brilliant crystals, some long and slender, others short and thick. The crystals are commonly twinned, several crystals often joined or crossing each other at angles of 60°, forming beautiful cabinet specimens of rosettes or reticulated masses of needles. The gem minerals—emerald, aqamarine, and hid­denite—occur in distinct crystals in the veins, and when lining the walls of cavities and of good color they make a beautiful contrast with the associated gangue minerals.
The vein at the Ellis emerald mine is pegmatite, with cavities and pockets included in it. The pegmatite strikes N. 50° E., with a high northerly to vertical dip. There are stringers or arms of pegmatite along the walls, and at one place the pegmatite is composed along one side largely of small mica blocks. The country rock is biotite gneiss, small dikes of quartz diorite being included. The latter weathers out in rounded bowlders or "nigger heads," which are scat­tered over the surface near the mine. The quartz in portions of the pegmatite is a fairly dark rose color. So far, however, none suitable for gem purposes has been found.
51506—m r 1907, pt 2------51
Ch. 3: Precious Gem stones in 1907 Page of 76 Ch. 3: Precious Gem stones in 1907
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US Geol. Surv. 1907. Gemstones, Metals.
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