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Aramayoite, a new mineral, from Bolivia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

L. J. Spencer*
Affiliation:
Mineral Department, British Museum (Natural History)

Extract

Bolivian minerals have been sent tbr examination and preservation in the British Museum oolleetiml at various times since 1894 by my old school-fellow Mr. Malcolm Robmts, A.R.S.M., now General ganager of the Compagnie Aramayo de Mines en Bolivie. Several of these have been described in the pages of this magazine (see vol. 14, p. 309). Although he has industriously collected Bolivian minerals for over thirty years he is only now rewarded by the discovery of a species new to science. The material which he has been good enough to entrust to me for description was recognized by him as being probably something new, and this was confirmed by a chemical analysis made by Mr. T. Burns MeGhie in the assay office at Quechisla in Bolivia.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1926

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References

page 156 note 1 This locality is mentioned by A. A. Barba, ‘Arte de los Metales', Madrid, 1639; English translation by the Earl of Sandwich, London, 1674, Book I, p. 115 : ‘And in the rich Mine of Chocaya, in the Province of the Chichas, in the richest Stones of that Oar they have found much Silver, like wyre woven together as aforesaid.'

page 157 note 1 Franckeite (of A. W. Stelzner, Neues Jahrb. Min., 1893, vol. ii, p. 114) was named after the brothers Carl and Ernst Franeke, with whom Mr. Aramayo was formerly associated in Aramayo Francke Mines Limited, and curiously came from this same localit.

page 160 note 1 Similar figures on fluorite and some other minerals have been described (in Japanese) and figured by M. Kuhara, Journ. Geol. Soc. Tokyo, 1919, vol. 26, pp. 208-214, 335-341, pis. VIII-X, XII-XIV, and called ‘ tear-figures'.