Thursday, September 22, 2016

Franklin-Sterling Hill Collecting Trip 2

The day after collecting at the Franklin Mine, I visited the Sterling Hill Mine, in Ogdensburg, New Jersey with the same purpose.  Although the Franklin Mine is the source of the rarest and most sought-after combinations of fluorescent minerals, Sterling Hill Mining Museum was the more popular tourist destination, with collecting areas as well as a tour through parts of the original mine and a warehouse-sized exhibit of minerals and mining history.



Overhead conveyor system coming out of the cliff over the museum visitor center.
Plus my little red rental car.

Old mine shaft in the collecting area, off-limits to collectors and curious alike.

Rusted old mine car with section of track.

I took this photo with my phone while collecting in the Passaic Pit that morning.  A lady walking by saw me breaking rock and wanted to know what we should be looking for, so I ducked into my dark spot with the lamp, then showed her the photo and wished her luck.

Between the two mines I collected and shipped home about 200lbs of rock.

Franklin-Sterling Hill Collecting Trip 3

The rocks.

This is what 200+ plus pounds of rock from New Jersey looks like.

Fluorescent calcite (red) and willemite (green).  Matching halves from a rock I split in the Buckwheat Dump, Franklin Mine.  Larger half is 4"x3"x2"

Same specimen, white light.

Calcite, willemite, and hardystonite, also from a split rock, Buckwheat Dump. 4.5"x3.5"x2"

Same specimen, white light.

Fluorescent sphalerite (orange) with minor eyes of calcite and an unknown fluorescent light blue - maybe cleiophane sphalerite?  This piece is kind of an oddball, as the sphalerite is brightest orange under short and mid wave UV, instead of long wave like usual.  Parts are phosphorescent after exposure to long wave as well.  This specimen is also one half of an near-mirror split with another piece - the geologist onsite noticed the sparkle of the sphalerite in my bucket and split it for me with a small chisel.  Buckwheat Dump, 5"x4"x2"

Same specimen, white light.

Fluorescent salmon calcite from the Passaic Pit, Sterling Hill Mine.  Only half of the specimen is pictured, full size piece is 6"x"5"x3"

Same specimen, white light.  You can see the salmon.

Fluorescent calcite and willemite, Passaic Pit. 6"x"3"x4"

Same specimen, white light.  The red is zincite, the black franklinite.

Calcite, willemite, and hydrozincite, Passaic Pit.  4.5"x3.5"x3.5"

Same specimen, white light.

Franklin-Sterling Hill Collecting Trip 4

The Tour.

The tour began at these large metal gates to the mine.  The pipe pictured lower left was a drainage pipe for the pumps keeping the mine from flooding.  When the mine was no longer profitable, the pumps were shut down and the lower levels flooded.

View down the adit behind the gates, complete with ore car and tracks.

This sign was posted at the inclined shaft for the mechanical hoist.  The hoist and its operators were responsible for ferrying miners down to their work stations, and hauling ore to the conveyors.  These bell signals were used to direct traffic.

A pair of toilets used down in the mines.  The story goes that whoever was late that day or otherwise on the boss' bad side was assigned toilet cleaning duty.  I don't think that the toilets were normally placed this close together.

A fluorescent room in the Sterling Hill Mine, showcasing boulders of the most common fluorescent minerals found here as well as their presence in the walls of the mine itself.

When the pumps keeping the mine dry were shut off, the water in the tunnels rose until it reached the natural water table.  Pictured here is an inclined shaft leading to deeper areas of the mine now filled with water.

Peering into a pocket where rusty chains descend into water.

These huge specimens were in the museum, the largest easily 4' tall.

This was posted outside the museum men's room.

An old mine hoist control unit.

A photograph of "the very last Sterling Hill miner," posted on the front of his old locker.
Sterling Hill closed in 1986.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Esoterizona Stones 45

Fluorescent Minerals

Fluorescent willemite (green) and calcite (red) from the Franklin Mine, Franklin, NJ.
4"x3"x3"

The reddish-brown mineral on the right half of the specimen is tephroite.

Under short wave UV the willemite is visible within the tephroite as fine veins in a pattern called "exsolution willemite."


Thursday, September 1, 2016

Fluorescent Mineral Photoshoot 3

A friend brought over his digital camera setup this past Saturday and he took pictures of fluorescent minerals from my collection.  This was his first effort at photographing fluorescent minerals, and my first time photographing these rocks with something besides a cellphone camera.  I couldn't be happier with the results.

Fluorescent green hyalite opal from Zacatecas, Mexico, shown under shortwave UV light. More photos of and details about this specimen can also be found at http://www.esoterizona.com/2016/02/esoterizona-stones-39.html.

Closeup of solid nodule of hyalite opal at top-center of specimen picture above.
Nodule has a diameter of approximately 10mm.

Fluorescent yellow cerussite crystals and dull red fluorescent blades of barite from Mibladen, Morocco, shown under short- and midwave UV.  The blue in the picture is just lamp reflection.  4.5"x3"x1.5".  A closeup of the bright crystal at top-left can be seen here.

Closeup of fluorescent blue scheelite and dull yellow crystalline powellite, shown under shortwave UV light.  This specimen was collected in Pinal County, AZ.
More photos of and information about this specimen can be seen at http://www.esoterizona.com/2014/10/esoterizona-stones-26.html.

Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Fluorescent Mineral Photoshoot 2

A friend brought over his digital camera setup this past Saturday and he took pictures of fluorescent minerals from my collection.  This was his first effort at photographing fluorescent minerals, and my first time photographing these rocks with something besides a cellphone camera.  I couldn't be happier with the results.

Terminated, fluorescent fluorapatite crystals from Cerro de Mercado Mine, Durango, Mexico, shown under midwave UV.  Largest crystal is 21mm long, FOV approximately 35mm wide.  Full size specimen pictured below.

Fluorapatite crystals and hyalite opal pictured under shortwave UV and midwave UV.  The fluorapatite is now lavender and the hyalite opal is bright green.  4"x3"x3"

Photos of this specimen can also be seen at http://www.esoterizona.com/2015/08/esoterizona-stones-35.html.
You can also see the difference in results from a DSLR versus phone camera.

Terminated, fluorescent yellow apatite crystals from Panasqueria Mine, Portugal, shown under shortwave UV.  Crystals up to 10mm, FOV approximately 35mm.

"Fantasy Rock" from Taseq Slope, Ilimaussaq Complex, Narsaq, Greenland, shown under short and long wave UV.  "Fantasy Rock" is a collectors' term given to the multicolored fluorescent rocks from this locale.  This example shows fluorescent cherry-red tugtupite surrounding eyes of white chkalovite (looks more blue), along with orange sodalite, green polylithionite, and blue-white analcime.  FOV approximately 70mm.

Fluorescent Mineral Photoshoot 1

A friend brought over his digital camera setup this past Saturday and he took pictures of fluorescent minerals from my collection.  This was his first effort at photographing fluorescent minerals, and my first time photographing these rocks with something besides a cellphone camera.  I couldn't be happier with the results.

Cubic, twinned fluorite crystal from the Rogerley Mine, Weardale, County Durham, England, shown under longwave UV.  Distinct zoning is visible in the upper face of the top twin as a series of faint, nested rectangles.  Length of the upper crystal is 15mm (0.6"), FOV approximately 30mm wide.

Platy crystals of fluorescent yellow-green phlogopite on lazurite crystals, non-fluorescent dark blue, both over fluorescent red calcite crystals.  A small patch of fluorescent orange hauyne is also visible along the top. Shown under midwave and longwave UV.  This specimen is from Kokcha Valley, Sar-e-Sang, Badakshan, Afghanistan.  The largest phlogopite crystals are 3mm, FOV approximately 20mm.

Large, terminated gypsum crystal from Red River Floodway, Winnipeg, Canada, shown under shortwave UV.  Crystal is 25mm across and 20mm long from the base.  FOV approximately 30mm.

Photos of this specimen can also be seen at http://www.esoterizona.com/2015/02/esoterizona-stones-30.html

Cerrusite crystals from Mibladen, Khenifra Province, Morocco, shown under midwave UV.   Large crystal as shown is 15mm across, FOV approximately 25mm.