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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2018
The specimen to which this paper refers, is one of a number of minerals from Kurdistan, presented to the Hunterian Museum, in Glasgow University, by Mr. D. Ferguson, to whom I am indebted for the following particulars of the occurrence. The exact locality is the Zarshuran River, in Kurdistan, where a large mineral vein, which has been worked for centuries for orpiment, is found. The country-rock is red sandstone, overlying, unconformably, altered slates and schists, which are intruded by a boss of felspathic granite or syenite. Near the surface the vein-stone is chiefly a kind of calc-sinter, but this disappears as the depth increases and calcite becomes the predominant mineral in the gangue, being associated with some quartz and fluorspar.
page 144 note 1 Cf. P. Groth, 'Physikalische Krystallographie,' 4te Aufl., 1905, p. 149.
page 145 note 1 Hintze, C., 'Handbueh der Mineralogie,' 1910, vol. i, p. 1934 Google Scholar.
page 145 note 2 E. Pugh, Inaug.-Diss., Göttingen, 1856; quoted in Hintze, loc. cit. An early analysis by J. F. John (1812) is quoted in Dana's ' System of Mineralogy,' 5th edition.
page 145 note 3 O. Luedecke, Zeits. Kryst. Min., 1884, vol. viii, pp. 82-83. Numerous references to previous literature are given.
page 146 note 1 Termier, P., Bull. Soc. franç. Min., 1895, vol. xviii, pp. 867–380 Google Scholar.