Lusakite, a cobalt-bearing silicate from Northern Rhodesia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2018
Extract
This interesting new mineral was discovered by the first author in February 1933 whilst in the employment of the British South Africa Company Limited as a field geologist to the Rhodesia Minerals Concession Limited under the direction of Dr. J. Austen Bancroft. The locality, longitude 29° 29′ E. and latitude 15° 27′ S., is about eighty miles east of Lusaka, the new capital of Northern Rhodesia, after which the mineral is named. The central African plateau has here been cut back from the northern escarpment of the Zambezi rift valley, about 10 miles to the south, producing a rugged topography varying from 1,000 feet to 4,000 feet in altitude.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Mineralogical magazine and journal of the Mineralogical Society , Volume 23 , Issue 146 , September 1934 , pp. 598 - 606
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1934
References
page 600 note 1 Hörner, F., Beiträge zur Kenntnis des Stauroliths. Inaug-Diss. Heidelberg, 1915. [Min. Abstr., vol.1, p. 395.]Google Scholar
page 602 note 1 Cardoso, G. M., Zeits. Krist., 1928, vol. 66, p. 485.Google Scholar [M.A. 3-529, 4-111.]
page 602 note 2 Náray-Szabó, S., Zeits. Krist., 1929, vol. 7], p. 103.Google Scholar [M.A. 4-160.]
page 602 note 3 HFeA15Si2O13. S.L. Penfield and J. H. Pratt, On the chemical composition of staurolite... Amer. Journ. Sci., 1894, ser. 3, vol. 47, p. 81.
page 602 note 4 H2Fe4Al18Si8O48. F. Hörner, 1915, loc. cir.
page 605 note 1 C. E. Tilley and J. S. Flett, Suture. Prog. Geol. Surv. Great Britain for 1929, 1930, part 2, pp. 24-41. [M.A. 4-402.]
- 7
- Cited by