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On some new forms prominently developed on crystals of Proustite

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

F. E. E. Lamplough*
Affiliation:
Of Trinity College, Cambridge

Extract

Whilst determining some crystals of proustite in the Mineralogical Museum at Cambridge, and which came from Bolivia or some other part of South America, my attention was attracted by faces of trigonal pyramids, which, as shown in figs. 1 and 2, are the most conspicuous on the crystals. On measurement, these faces were found to correspond very nearly to those of the rhombohedra {73̄3̄} = 10 R (fig. 1) and {94̄4̄} = 13R (fig. 2). The figures represent with fair accuracy the relatively large development of the faces of these new forms. Another form, {11.7̄.7̄} = –6 R, represented by a single face on the lower end of one crystal, is also new for proustite.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1903

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References

Page 295 note 1 From the element of Prof. Miers, this Magazine, 1888, vol. viii, p. 44.

Page 295 note 2 This Magazine, 1900, vol. xii, p. 339.