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CCUK-8 : (Hg, CrO4, S, H2O)?, Cinnabar : HgS

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Copyright © Peter Lof
 
 
 
 
minID: 8G6-GQQ

CCUK-8 : (Hg, CrO4, S, H2O)?, Cinnabar : HgS

Copyright © Peter Lof  - This image is copyrighted. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.
Field of View: 2 mm

Yellow microcrystals of CCUK-8 as alteration product of edoylerite, in circular cavity, with red cinnabar and quartz.


Euromex EduBlue, built-in 5 MP USB-2.0 1/2.8 inch Sensor CMOS Camera.
ImageFocus Plus capturing, Helicon Focus stacking.
Peter Lof photo and collection.

This photo has been shown 75 times
Photo added:22nd Dec 2023
Dimensions:2128x1747px (3.72 megapixels)

Data Identifiers

Mindat Photo ID:1341392 📋 (quote this with any query about this photo)
Long-form Identifier:mindat:1:4:1341392:8 📋
GUID:04aedc16-afb1-4d5d-8033-843f68699b7a 📋
Specimen MinID8G6-GQQ (note: this is not unique to this photo, it is unique to the specimen)

Discuss this Photo

PhotosMisidentified Clear Creek specimen

20th Jan 2024 21:57 UTCMichael J. Feldman

This is likely CCUK-8, not edoylerite. I conferred with Ted Hadley, who says there is "no doubt" in this identification.

20th Jan 2024 22:10 UTCKeith Compton 🌟 Manager

Must admit I had never heard of CCUK-8. But the above photo sure looks like it.


20th Jan 2024 22:41 UTCMichael J. Feldman

Gail Dunning, Ted, and others identified roughly 15 other materials from the Clear Creek Claim and Mine that are likely new minerals, but were never fully described and published as such. From what I gather, determining the structure proved very difficult. Interestingly, CCUK-8 is more common at the mine than edoylerite or edgarbaileyite.

21st Jan 2024 19:50 UTCTed Hadley

Prior to Gail, John Magnasco, and me, there were I think 12 new species discovered at CC Mine & claim. We brought it up to 24 new species (i.e., we found 12 additional species).

See our MinRec article for details.

Ted Hadley 

21st Jan 2024 19:57 UTCTed Hadley

Roughly in order of abundance:

-Cinnabar
-Mercury
-Edgarbaileyite yellow, green, black, usually waxy
-#8 yellow powdery no xx
-Edoylerite yellow xx, either needles or flat blades or small fat twins
-Montroydite brown or yellow arrowhead shaped xx or needles
-Wattersite type 1 sharp xx with mercury and edgarbaileyite, type 2 corroded with #8 & #13
-Eglestonite tiny  greasy xx look kinda like chlorargyrite all colors except blue
Everything else with only 1-10 samples known.

Ted Hadley 

20th Jan 2024 22:30 UTCUwe Kolitsch Manager

Message sent.

20th Jan 2024 23:34 UTCJeff Weissman Expert

I thought CCUK-8 was more of a paler shade of yellow as compared to edoylerite. See https://www.mindat.org/min-51173.html for examples. That said, the above image is not of sufficient quality or sharpness to determine if there are any edoylerite crystals present, moreover, the image is oversaturated so that if this is indeed CCUK-8, it is appearing brighter yellow than normal. (I think it is oversaturated as the red cinnabar is much too intense)

21st Jan 2024 01:15 UTCMichael J. Feldman

In my experience, CCUK-8 is lemon yellow. The first photo seems representative, although the color there is perhaps a bit more pale than examples I've seen.   

21st Jan 2024 15:09 UTCPeter Lof

I have checked the specimen once more, and although the cinnabar might be a bit oversaturated due to the sensor's capturing setting, the yellow material is as bright as on the photo uploaded. I can't get it sharper as I face here the limits of what the microscope's lenses and the built-in sensor can achieve.

21st Jan 2024 19:46 UTCTed Hadley

The photo is fine, I don't think you could get much better.
This is a classic example of a type 2 occurrence:

Wattersite + cinnabar -> edoylerite -> #8 + #13.

If you look in the lower right corner of the vug there might be some relic wattersite remaining. This is a common association. In this case, all of the edoylerite has altered to #8. This is actually a good #8 photo, better than most others on Mindat.

Ted Hadley 

31st Jan 2024 16:41 UTCPeter Lof

I have changed the name and description.
 
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