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On a compact chlorite from Bernstein, Austria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

W. Campbell Smith*
Affiliation:
Mineral Department of the British Museum (Natural History).

Extract

The material which is the subject of the present note was presented to the British Museum (Natural History) in November 1923, by Captain Eric C. Palmer, of the Styrian Jade Company, Bernstein, Burgenland, Austria. Bernstein is situated 92 kilometres south of Vienna, on the present borders of Styria and Upper Austria, and 22 kilometres west of the frontier town of Guns. Previous to the Treaty of Versailles, Bernstein was in Hungary, Comitat Vas (Eisenburg). Its Hungarian name is Borostytánkő.

In 1854, Johann Cžjžek, in a paper entitled ‘Das Rosaliengebirge und der Wechsel in Niederösterreich’, had described the geology of the district, and given some account of the rocks, including a description of the occurrence at Bernstein of serpentine in the midst of an area of hornblende-schists, chlorite-schists, and gneiss.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1924

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References

Page 241 note 1 Cžjžek, J., Jahrb. k.k. Geol. Reichsanst. Wien, 1854, vol. 5, p. 504 Google Scholar.

Page 241 note 2 Wartha, Y., Übor dio Mineralien dor Serpentin-Chlorit-Gruppe. Földtani Közlöny, 1886, vol. 16, pp 711 Google Scholar (Itung.), and pp. 79-88 (Germ.).

Page 242 note 1 Berwerth, F., Tschermaks Min. Petr. Mitt., 1912, vol. 31, p. 112.Google Scholar

Page 243 note 1 Iskyul, V., 1917. See Min. Abstr., 1924, vol. 2, p. 215.Google Scholar