TENNANTITE
Specimen ten-6
$ 95.00Dims: 5.5 x 4.6 x 1.4" (14.0 x 11.7 x 3.6 cm)
Wt: 1 lb., 14.0 oz. (850 g)
Hulcani Mine, Ancash Department, Peru
This flat cabinet specimen consists of several dozen warped, heavily-intergrown Tennantite crystals that coat a thin, crystalline pyrite crust. The Tennantites are so heavily intergrown that it is difficult to assess their sizes, but most appear to measure between 0.2 and 0.4" (0.5 and 1.0 cm) in diameter. They are in good condition, though several of the most exposed points show some damage. All are so heavily intergrown that their complex, cube-based forms are almost unidentifiable; however, I do see faces that correspond to complex variations of either the tristetrahedron or the deltoid dodecahedron, or perhaps both. All have a moderately dark gray coloration and a dull metallic luster. Several pyritohedral pyrite crystals peek through among the Tennantites- none of these are exposed enough for good study, but the largest likely have diameters of 0.7 to 0.8" (1.8 to 2.0 cm), and all have excellent form, with well-defined edges and clean, lightly striated faces that possess the standard pale golden color and metallic luster of this mineral. These sulfide minerals are accompanied by scores of tiny siderite crystals which range in diameter from 1 mm up to 0.3" (8 mm). They occur either as trigonal tabular "nailheads" or as rounded nodules. All have a pale brown color and a dull waxy luster, and are opaque. They are scattered on top of the Tennantite and pyrite on one side of the specimen, and are are highly intergrown into a crust that coats most of the other side of the pyrite base.