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Hemimorphite : Zn4Si2O7(OH)2·H2O, Rosasite : (Cu,Zn)2(CO3)(OH)2, Conichalcite : CaCu(AsO4)(OH)

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Copyright © Ko Jansen
 
 
 
 
minID: 3LW-MHH

Hemimorphite : Zn4Si2O7(OH)2·H2O, Rosasite : (Cu,Zn)2(CO3)(OH)2, Conichalcite : CaCu(AsO4)(OH)

Copyright © Ko Jansen  - This image is copyrighted. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.
Field of View: 2.16 mm

Rosasite dark green bottom left , Hemimorphite blanc central part , the light green can be Conichalcite , p.w. 2.16 mm , coll. & photo Ko Jansen.

See discusion : https://www.mindat.org/mesg-508746.html

Collected: 2018 by David Nieto

This photo has been shown 255 times
Photo added:1st Dec 2019
Dimensions:1963x1350px (2.65 megapixels)
Camera:NIKON E4500

Data Identifiers

Mindat Photo ID:1016227 📋 (quote this with any query about this photo)
Long-form Identifier:mindat:1:4:1016227:2 📋
GUID:d1dd310f-70d3-400f-a156-5e0578ba4800 📋
Specimen MinID3LW-MHH (note: this is not unique to this photo, it is unique to the specimen)

Discuss this Photo

PhotosRosasite from Fuerteventura???

28th Mar 2020 15:10 UTCJolyon Ralph Founder

Is this correct? I strongly doubt it.

I've been to this particular locality, it's a big basalt volcanic cone, lots of basalt, and that's about it.

28th Mar 2020 16:30 UTCClosed Account 🌟

Maybe there is a rock-shop there, where Mr. Nieto collected ist. Another possibility would be the dump of a mineral collector. A natural occurrence however, seems extremely unlikely.

28th Mar 2020 19:14 UTCDavid Nieto

Well, I have not a clue how my name pops up here. I was never in Fuerteventura. And if this is a specimen of my I handed over to Ko it will be from some mine in Greece. Probably mislabeled..!?

28th Mar 2020 22:02 UTCClosed Account 🌟

David Nieto.

The reason your name pops up is that the description of the photo states:
"Collected: 2018 by David Nieto"

Cheers,

Branko

29th Mar 2020 17:16 UTCDavid Nieto

Well, I am not familiar with Mindat at all (just new member from yesterday), but if I open the foto I don't see my name. So I am indeed a mis-attributed collector:-)))) Looking more careful at the foto I think it is indeed a Minicas specimen I collected in 2018 and give it later to Ko as a present. So keep your horses, only a mistake by Ko on the location! 

30th Mar 2020 13:18 UTCUwe Kolitsch Manager

I think it is indeed a Minicas specimen I collected in 2018
 You probably meant "Cerro de la Corona specimen"?

28th Mar 2020 17:24 UTCDan Polhemus

Looks like a typical specimen from the Mina de Ojuela in Durango, Mexico.

28th Mar 2020 19:51 UTCAdrián Pesudo

Esto  parece rosasita, hemimorfita y duftita; tal paragénesis es típica de muestras españolas del Cerro de La Corona, Huercal de Almería, Provincia de Almería, Andalucía, España.


28th Mar 2020 22:16 UTCJosé Zendrera 🌟 Manager

The location pointed by Adrián:
For sure it is not from Fuerteventura. A nice pic anyway.


28th Mar 2020 22:57 UTCFrank K. Mazdab 🌟 Manager

It's both a bit humorous and also rather disconcerting that a specimen is attributed to a collector who'd never even been to the stated locality... regardless of whether the mineral ID is correct , either the locality or the attributed collector has to be wrong (or both?)

first we had to contend with collectors' mis-identified samples...

then we had to contend with collectors' mis-located samples...

and now we have the unexpected concern of mis-attributed collectors???

what will be next? samples with noted enrichments in duritanium and neutronium, creative new varieties (quartz var. autumn drizzle), or perhaps remarkable pedigrees (ex. collection Socrates)?

28th Mar 2020 23:01 UTCPaul Brandes 🌟 Manager

Be careful what you wish for, Frank..... ;-)

29th Mar 2020 00:20 UTCDon Windeler

03226320016028553114172.jpg
At least we now know who to blame when "autumn drizzle quartz" shows up on the market.  I'm tempted to suggest members suggest their best examples, but they'd probably show up on eBay.

My example of the cylindrical, COVIDrizzle habit of palygorskite is attached.  Exceptionally prized.  

(All hail wikipedia, attributions here:   https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Toiletpapier_(Gobran111).jpg )

29th Mar 2020 02:26 UTCFrank K. Mazdab 🌟 Manager

very exceptionally prized...

I hope mineral dealers sell it, because my local grocery store certainly doesn't...

29th Mar 2020 04:13 UTCKevin Conroy Manager

People who hoard toilet paper are sh*theads.

29th Mar 2020 16:36 UTCKo Jansen

Dear Gentlemen,
I dont know ,how that name could come on the info , after making a photo who i WANTED TO SHOW TO COLLECTORS , the first is checking in the material list if it is present than I start with filling in the info , look for the name in the list .I have just checked the list if the other name was close to the original, but I didnot see it , by making notes what I do I can see that it must be < Las Minicas mine ,Benahadux , Sierra de Gabor ,Almeria , Spain .
 I am a collector of micromounts and  I love to present photo details of the minerals , in the way that you are looking through the Microscope , and see details .
Gentlemen thanks for the paper , you are gr ?
with regards Ko Jansen .

30th Mar 2020 16:03 UTCJolyon Ralph Founder

Thank you for fixing it!
 
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