hemimorphite : List Of Minerals : The Stone Network
The Business To Business Portal For The Natural Stone Trade

Stone Blogs

Asia Blog
Europe Blog
Global Blog

Stone Database

Natural Stone Database

Stone Fairs

Exhibitions 2013
Exhibitions 2012
Exhibitions 2011
Exhibitions 2010

Stone Images

By Country Of Origin
Granite
Limestone
Marble
Onyx
Sandstone
Slate
Travertine

Stone Images
3,660+ Slabs

Granite Colors
Limestone Colors
Marble Colors
Onyx Colors
Quartzite Colors
Sandstone Colors
Slate Colors
Soapstone Colors
Travertine Colors

Stone Machines

New Stone Machines
Used Stone Machines

Stone Sites

Stone Forums
Stone Magazines
Stone Portals

Stone Supplies & Fabricators

Australia
Canada
United Kingdom
U.S.A.

Stone Testing

ASTM
BRE
Sandberg
Stats
Stone Initiatives
UKAS

Petrology

Granite
Limestone
Marble
Quartzite
Sandstone
Slate
Travertine

Rocks

Igneous
List of Minerals
List of Rocks
Metamorphic
Minerals
Sedimentary

Various Resources

A To Z Stone Names
Anti Slip
Abacus Index
BIDA
Building Conservation
Building Design
English Heritage
Maintenance Products
RIBA
RICS
Ryan Links
Salvo
SPAB
Stone Federation GB
Trade Terminology

Hemimorphite, is a sorosilicate mineral which has been mined from days of old from the upper parts of zinc and lead ores, chiefly associated with smithsonite. It was often assumed to be the same mineral and both were classed under the same name of calamine. In the second half of the 18th century it was discovered that there were two different minerals under the heading of calamine - a zinc carbonate and a zinc silicate, which often closely resembled each other.

The silicate was the more rare of the two, and was named hemimorphite because of the hemimorph development of its crystals. This unusual form, which is typical of only a few minerals, means that the crystals are terminated by dissimilar faces. Hemimorphite most commonly forms crystalline crusts and layers, also massive, granular, rounded and reniform aggregates, concentrically striated, or finely needle-shaped, fibrous or stalactitic, and rarely fan-shaped clusters of crystals.

Some specimens show strong green fluorescence in shortwave ultraviolet light (253.7 nm) and weak light pink fluorescence in longwave UV.

  • Occurrence
  • Hemimorphite most frequently occurs as the product of the oxidation of the upper parts of sphalerite bearing ore bodies, accompanied by other secondary minerals which form the so-called iron cap or gossan. Hemimorphite is an important ore of zinc and contains up to 54.2% of the metal.

    The regions on the Belgian-German border are well known for their deposits of hemimorphite of metasomatic origin, especially Vieille Montagne in Belgium and Aachen in Germany. Other deposits are near Tarnovice in upper Silesia, Poland; near Phoenixville, Pennsylvania; the Missouri lead-zinc district; Elkhorn, Montana; Leadville, Colorado; and Organ Mountains, New Mexico in the United States; and in several localities in North Africa. Further hemimorphite occurrences are in Nerchinsk, Siberia; Rabelj, Slovenia; Bleiberg, Carinthia, Austria; Matlock, Derbyshire, England.

    Trade Supplies
    M.I.A. Information

    Classic Black Granites

    Information
    Information
  • Absolute Black Granite : Black Galaxy, Star Galaxy, Nero Impala etc. Black is popular, black looks great, black is more expensive >>>
  • Black Galaxy Granite : Quarrying & Quality Information >>>
  • Copyright :
    Legal Information
    This web site is protected under International Law by the
    Digital Millennium Copyright Act 1998.

    If you wish to link to this site please feel free to do so HOWEVER blatant design copying, code copying and theft of bandwidth will result in legal action!

    Delicious Logo ImageDelicious Digg Logo ImageDigg Facebook Logo ImageFacebook Reddit Logo ImageReddit StumbleUpon Logo ImageStumbleUpon Twitter Logo ImageTwitter

    Home : Contact : About : Legal : Copyright 1998-2012 The Stone Network

    Protected by Copyscape Duplicate Content Tool