BISMUTHINITE (Bismuth Sulfide) (original) (raw)

THE MINERAL BISMUTHINITE


Bismuthinite is an important ore of bismuth. Sprays of steel gray prismatic bismuthinite crystals radiate outward from a common attachment point in the more spectacular specimens of this somewhat rare sulfide mineral. These specimens can not help but be compared to specimens of stibnite. It is difficult to distinguish from the similar looking and closely related antimony sulfide. Bismuthinite is heavier than stibnite and on closer inspection of the crystals, there exists a noticeable difference with bismuthinite's having straighter, flatter faces. In massive form the confusion is even more pronounced, but bismuthinite is not associated with the typical antimony or arsenic minerals to which stibnite is so commonly allied.

Associations of bismuthinite are varied, but combinations with the rare elemental mineral **bismuth**are particularly special. **Chalcopyrite**is another especially common associate. The carbonate mineral bismutite,**Bi2(CO3)O2,**is found as an alteration (oxidation) product of bismuthinite and often is found as pseudomorphic crystals after bismuthinite. A pseudomorph is an atom by atom replacement of one mineral by another without significant changes in the outward appearance of the crystals (pseudo="false" and morph="shape").

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