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V.—Notes on some Norwegian Minerals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Extract

The Silver-mines, near Kongsberg, in Norway, are said to have been worked unceasingly for the last 200 years or more.

On June 6th, last, I was fortunate in being allowed to visit these celebrated mines, and also the silver-works at Kongsberg. More fortunate still, in obtaining the present beautiful specimens of native silver and Argentitc. They had very recently been taken from the mines, and I was told that my visit was opportune, because such specimens were not of every day occurrence. Be this, as it may, they are of especial interest just now, as illustrating the theory of “metal-growth,” and the more particularly so, as two of them have most obligingly, since they came into my possession, thrown out sundry hints of bodily activity. In fact, have “grown”; and, as they have a direct bearing upon a previous paper, I propose to describe them as well as I can.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1877

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References

page 229 note * These specimens were sent to the meeting at Plymouth for examination, but did not arrive in time.

page 229 note † The descriptions are mostly unintelligible without the specimens, they have therefore been abridged.

page 230 note * This remarkable film, a portion of which Mr. Readwin kindly gave me, infusible in a gas flame, but slightly fusible before the blowpipe.—J.H.C.