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SUSANNITE from Frongoch mine

Last Updated: 23rd Aug 2008


Over the last 20 years or so I have collected from the dumps of this mine . I am amazed at the variety of crystal forms susannite occurs in, and the number of associations it has with other species. This article I hope brings to notice the habits this mineral can have from one of my favorite locations, Frongoch mine.

Frongoch mine is situated about 3 kms SW by S of Devils Bridge village/hamlet with its picturesque gorge and rushing stream in a lightly wooded area . The village is the terminus for the light steam railway, which winds its way along the valley of the Afon Rheidol to Aberystwyth on the coast some 16 kms to the west .
A marked contrast to the desolation of a metal mine largely abandoned over a 100 years ago.
Frongoch mine is nestled in a broad shallow upland valley running ENE-WSW between two rounded low ridges, about 0.5 kms apart. The quarry on the southern ridge was used to furnish materials to build the various engine houses etc required for the mining enterprise.
First mentioned in the late 1750's, although no production is recorded from this lease. Major development of the ore body appears to have been from 1790 to about 1818. In 1824 the Williams from Cornwall(the family had major interest in Cornwall not only mining) took a lease, this only lasted until 1834. The mine was then taken over by John Taylor & Sons management (the great 19th century mining firm). This was to be Frongoch finest time, with over all steady increasing output until about 1870, when the mine began to showing signs of vales falling off. Taylor continued to work Frongoch until 1878. When the mine passed to John Kitto and others who largely worked the zinc ore which remained in the mine, and continuing to work Frongoch until 1897. When a new lease was taken by the Belgian company Societe Anonyme Miniere but only until 1903. In the early working of Frongoch galena was the main ore mineral, sphalerite was only produced when the price was right. Being either left standing in the mine or thrown on the dumps, along with poor grade lead ore. Zinc ore was produced sporadicly from the 1790 working and on ward. And on a more enerjetic scale by the 1870s, continuing to be so until the end of the underground mines life in 1903. From 1924 to 1930 the dumps where reworked on a substantial scale. And up to the mid 1950's a small dressing plant was used to reclaim lead and zinc ore from the dumps. Output from these later sporadic relatively small scale dump workings is not recorded. Over the years the dump material has also been used for hardcore. In the mid to late 1990's this had greatly increased, but because of "environmental" concerns it has stoped. Looking at old photographs of the site it would appear that less than 25% of the dumps remain.
Frongoch was largely developed by water wheel until about 1840 when steam engines were introduced by Taylor & Sons, but water wheels where to remain the major power for ore dressing etc.


Geology:
The fault vein coursing WSW-ENE at Frongoch has been traced for about 3 kms, but has been said to extend a further 2 kms to the east. A typical trend for veins in mid-Wales. Also quite usual for fault systems in this area is there discontinuous nature, commonly splitting up in to many thin strings, and reuniting. Where the veinlets coalesced there was sometimes an improvement in ore quality. The fault cuts through Silurian mudstones/shales, arenites of the Devils Bridge formation, Llanddovery age. Old records indicate there where two discontinuous ore shoots worked. One on the south, the other on the north side of the fault system. The main ore minerals were galena and sphalerite, which was found through out the developed area. Although there was an increase in sphalerite in depth, with a corisponding decrease in galena. By the end of the Taylor& Sons working of the mine the ground was becoming increasingly hard to work, and very little profit could be had from these deep levels. The mine having been developed to a 154 fathom level at Vaughan’s shaft.

Susannite Pb4(SO4)(CO3)2(OH)2 is the trigonal trimorph of leadhillite monoclinic, and macphsonite orthorhombic .
Forming Platy to tabular pseudohexagonal crystals, prismatic crystals and pyramidal orthorhombic forms.
The colour in susannite from Frongoch mine is colourless to white, light shades of brown to yellowish which is one of the more common colourings , green rarely pale blue.

Although there has been limited investigation of susannite from the mid-Wales ore field, nearly all examples indecating a leadhillite group mineral have so far been found to be susannite. Except one specimen from Esgair Hir mine, which although not having the typical form of a leadhillite group mineral. Was found by xrd at the NHM London to be leadhillite. And is believed to be a leadhillite pseudomorph after an unknown lath-like mineral.
Susannite at Frongoch is found in particularly good micro crystals to 2.5 mm covering areas to 1cm +, and are relatively abundant in the right sort of matrix. The mineral is one of the last species to have formed in the basic sulphate assemblage only being post dated by a rare coating of “hemimorphite“. On one specimen I have, susannite is postdated by wroewolfeite. Specimens are mostly collected in a quartz veinstone with remnants of highly corroded galena from dumps about 50 mts in front of the ruinous engine houses. These are probably some of the oldest dumps.

These two images show the more common platy crystals form of susannite with very little develpment of prisum faces.























Here simular crystals can be seen,but with more develpment of the prisum faces genarating a tabular habit .







































In this image the tabular habit of susannite is seen as a group of crystals, with blue-green areas of caledonite.





























The two crystals in these images show good examples of annular and stepped growth pattens which are another feature of susannite from Frongoch mine.




















Here the image shows a rare "verticaly" stacked group of platy crystals,with blue-green caledonite.
























In these two images there has been substantial development of the prisum faces, the crystals appearing to have a barrel-like form.
























Rare blue crystals showing major development of the prisum.


























Tiny crystsls of susannite showing acicular prismatic habit.

























These two images depict prismatic crystals with off sets, whiel the second image probabley also shows oscillatory growth.























Showing a number of prismatic crystals bundled together, with probable oscillatory growth.




























Here the two images show barrel like colour zoned crystals partly over grown by white complex secondary growth of susannite(2).





























This image shows the late stage of susannite(2) in its complex crystal habits of oscilatory growth, with prismatic form and off sets.

























Here can be seen acicular crystals some of which are terminated by trigonal-"rhombic" crystals.
































In this image susannite forms scattered balls and small botryoidal groups which show a radial inner structure,










































Some of the paragenic seqences noted on specimens collected from Frongoch:-

Cerussite-caledonite-SUSANNITE. Common

Anglesite-caledonite-SUSANNITE. Common

Cerussite-bechereite-SUSANNITE-hemimorphite. Rare

Namuwite-linarite-SUSANNITE. Rare

Namuwite-SUSANNITE(1)-SUSANNITE(2). Very rare

Bechererite-linarite-SUSANNITE. Extremally rare

Cerussite-redgillite-SUSANNITE. Extremally rare

Namuwite-bechererite-redgillite-SUSANNITE(1)-SUSANNITE(2)-hydrocerussite. Extremally rare

Schulenbergite-SUSANNITE-wroewolfeite. Extremally rare

Cerussite-hemimorphite-namuwite-bechererite-hemimorphite-SUSANNITE. Extremally rare.






























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Comments

great report steve

ages since i've been there, must have another go this summer

cheers

ian


Ian Jones
23rd Apr 2008 10:37am
By the Belgian Company "Societe Anonyme Miniere" you mean "Société des mines et fonderies de zinc de la Vieille Montagne" (in short Vieille Montagne or VM), or is it a different one? I didn't know they had a lease up there in that period...

Philip Mostmans
24th Apr 2008 2:37pm
Hi Ian glad you found it interesting, I will also be going back to see if I can find some of the corkite and plumbogumite that's been found.

And Philip, no its as writen, thay were a Smalting company from Liege. Thay actually sold Frongoch in 1899 to Societe Anonyme des Mines de Frongoch. But I did not want to complecate things to much, as this artical is on susannite. Also Frongoch at this time had an almost pan-europen dimention. Belgin finance, British, French and German machinery, Welsh and Italian miners. A full history can be found in David Bick's book., Frongoch Lead & Zinc Mine.

Steve Rust
24th Apr 2008 8:18pm
Steve, the Vieille Montagne was indeed a smelting company situated in Liege. At that time it became one of the leading zinc producers with mines in Spain, Tunisia, Morocco, etc. Apparently at the same time when they gave up on Frongoch mine they leased a decent amount of mines in the North Pennines (Allendale & Alstoon Moor).
It is as you say not really the issue here, but I found it an interesting note...

Philip Mostmans
25th Apr 2008 9:50am
Steve,
Really good article, and great photos. I have a small number of micros from Frongoch, and I went straight and had a look through them after reading this. Unfortunately nothing to match your photographs though! If I remember correctly, Vieille Montagne was around as a company until the late 1980s, when it merged with MHO to become Union Miniere (a zinc and copper smelting company). Union Miniere in turn changed its name to Umicore a few years later, and then spun off its copper smelters into a company called Cumerio, and last year did the same with its zinc smelters to form Nyrstar. Not very relevant to susannite at Frongoch, but I think these mining and smelting company genealogies are interesting. By the way, there was originally a zinc mine at Vieille Montagne in Belgium which produced some interesting smithsonite specimens.

Malcolm Southwood
25th Apr 2008 2:17pm
Steve,
An excellent survey of a fascinating mineral and occurence. I learned something about Susannite. Very nice photographs.


Robert Meyer
20th Aug 2008 8:39pm
Steve,
Just re-read this again. Have you been able to see any consistent relationships between crystal habits and the different parageneses you describe?

Malcolm Southwood
24th Aug 2008 1:06am
Malcolm
There dose appear to be a partial correlation with the various crystal habits, and associated species, but its not cut and dry.
I will add what I can as an up date.

Steve Rust
27th Aug 2008 6:48pm
Sadly the engine shaft collar is beginning to collapse into the shaft almost taking the bob wall with only a mater of time before it all gose

Steve Rust
17th Mar 2013 8:06pm

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