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A101 Margarosanite 622 grams, Parker Shaft Franklin New Jersey kreiderenter col.

$ 1584

Availability: 60 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Condition: New
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    TerraTreasures and Adventures101 offer this authentic Dominican Amber gemstone
    A Rare Franklin Margarosanite Specimen
    from the world famous Park Shaft in Franklin New Jersey
    weighing 622 grams or 1.38 pounds
    measuring 3 3/4 x 3 x 2 1/4 inches
    ,000
    .00 No Reserve
    short video click the below image
    short video click the below image
    Some photos of us underground at the Sterling Hill Zinc Mine over the years
    Margarosanite (from FOMS)
    A beautiful margarosanite specimen from the B. Kreiderenter collection from the world famous Franklin Zinc mine, Parker Shaft.
    Named in 1916 by William Ebenezer Ford and Walter Minor Bradley from the Greek for "pearl" and "tablet," in allusion to the pearly luster and lamellar structure of the crystallized material. The original specimens were found in 1898, but the mineral remained unnamed for nearly 18 years.
    Location Found:
    Franklin (Type Locality)
    Year Discovered:
    1916
    Formula:
    Pb(Ca,Mn2+)2(Si3O9)
    Essential Elements:
    Calcium, Lead, Oxygen, Silicon
    All Elements in Formula:
    Calcium, Lead, Manganese, Oxygen, Silicon
    IMA Status:
    Valid - first described prior to 1959 (pre-IMA) - "Grandfathered"
    Fluorescent Mineral Properties
    Shortwave UV light:
    Bright pale blue, often with red zones, less often with white and pink zones
    Mid wave UV light:
    Moderately bright red, orange
    Longwave UV light:
    Weak red, orange
    References:
    Dunn, Pete J. (1995).
    Franklin and Sterling Hill New Jersey: the world's most magnificent mineral deposits
    . Franklin, NJ.: The Franklin-Ogdensburg Mineralogical Society. p.499
    Frondel, Clifford (1972).
    The minerals of Franklin and Sterling Hill, a checklist
    . NY.: John Willey & Sons. p.67
    Shipping and Insurance
    Within the USA
    .00 - we ship all specimens US Postal Service  Priority Mail.
    Outside of the USA
    .00 - we ship US Postal Service Global Express Mail.
    If you require any other method of shipping please contact us.
    Payment
    Payment is required within 7 days of the end of the auction. We Accept Pay Pal. Multiple items can of course be combined for one shipping cost. We ship all specimens upon receipt of payment. Pay us Instantly and Securely with Pay Pal - fast, easy, and secure payments for all of your purchases!
    About Us
    We have been collecting amber in the field and prepping rough fossil amber specimens    since 1993. Photographs of our specimens have appeared in National Geographic, Nature, Science, Scientific American, Discover, Time, Newsweek, The New York Times and others. We have been featured in BBC’s production,  PaleoWorld's The Amber Hunters. We offer authentic museum quality Dominican and Burmese (Burmite) Amber display specimens of rare insects in amber and also authentic rare rough unprepared amber for sale. We have traveled many times to the Dominican Republic where we have chiseled beautiful amber gemstones out of the lignite layers deep in the amber mines north of Santiago. We have excavated in the Palo Quemado and Los CaCaos blue amber mines and also in La Nueva Toca and the world famous La Toca amber mines way up in the mountains    north of Santiago. For many years we have extensively collected mid Cretaceous New Jersey amber in the Raritan formation of central New Jersey and have traveled many times to collect late Cretaceous and early Paleocene amber in the Hanna formation of eastern Wyoming. We have collected mid Cretaceous amber in the Black Creek formation of eastern North Carolina and we have spent weeks collecting mid Cretaceous amber in the northern most Tundra of Alaska. Some of our collecting trips have been in October of 2003 to the western Aleutian Islands some 1000 miles west of Anchorage  to explore and collect Miocene amber, August of 2004 and April of 2006 we were back in the Dominican Republic to collect Miocene amber from the Palo Quemado amber mines which have recently closed due to the miners finding little amber, we were back to the Dominican Republic in April of 2006 to video in the La Toca amber mines, and in August of 2007 we excavated in La Toca and La Bucara. We’ve collected Eocene amber in western Indian in the Cambay amber formation. We've done excavations in the Dominican Republic in 2012, 2014, and 2016. Most Recently we have just returned from 2 collecting trips to a Eocene amber deposit in the southern United States in 2017 and in late summer 2018 we revisited a historic amber site in the south east that we've collected at in the 1990's. We're back to the Dominican Republic in early April of 2019.
    We have donated many hundreds of amber specimens to museums in the United States and have several dozen new species of insects in amber named after us. We have examined several thousand specimens of rough Burmese amber and have prepped    many new Burmese fossil amber specimens. We have traveled to Europe with colleagues to examine unusual spectacular Dominican Amber specimens in private collections and we consider the amber curators of the museums in Santo Domingo, Puerto Plata and New York City our friends. Exploring for and collecting amber along with the examination and research of amber is our passion.
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