SILVER

 

Silver is part of the gold-group of metallic elements.  Silver is a precious metal, but is far less valuable than gold or platinum.  Silver usually occurs as a silver sulfide mineral, but it also occurs in nature in its native state, often in the form of twisted wires.  Silver is moderately soft and has a silvery-white color on fresh surfaces that tarnishes to darker colors.  Elemental silver in nature is often found alloyed with other metals.  Naturally alloyed gold-silver is called electrum.

 

Silver wire (~3-5 mm sized masses) from the Mollie Gibson Mine near Aspen, central Pitkin County, west-central Colorado, USA.

 


 

Silver - large, tarnished silver wire mass from Kazakhstan (public display, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA).

 


 

Silver mass hosted in the Portage Lake Volcanic Series, from an unspecified locality near Houghton, Keweenaw Peninsula, Michigan's Upper Peninsula, USA.  Silver mineralization occurred during the late Mesoproterzoic, at ~1.05-1.06 billion years.  (Cranbrook Institute of Science collection, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, USA)

 


 

Silver from Kongsberg, Norway.  (Cranbrook Institute of Science collection, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, USA)

 


 

Silver from Kongsberg, Norway.  (Cranbrook Institute of Science collection, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, USA)

 


 

Silver crystals ("herringbone silver") from the La Nevada Mine, Batopilas District, Chihuahua State, northern Mexico (CSM 54598a & 54598b, Colorado School of Mines Geology Museum, Golden, Colorado, USA).

 


 

Silver from the Wolverine Mine, Houghton County, northern Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA.  Silver at this locality crystallized ~1.05-1.06 billion years ago in a pre-existing, ophitic basalt lava flow, the Kearsarge Flow (Portage Lake Volcanic Series, upper Mesoproterozoic, 1.095 billion years).  The principal mining target at this mine (and at mines throughout the Keweenaw Peninsula of northern Michigan) was copper.

 


 

Silver (3.0 cm across at its widest) from the McKinley-Darragh Mine, southern side of Cobalt Lake, Cobalt Mining District, southeastern Timiskaming District, southeatern Ontario, southeastern Canada.  Native silver at this mine occurs in near-vertical hydrothermal veins consisting of silver+cobalt-arsenides/sulfosalts+carbonate.  The veins cut through conglomerates, sandstones, and siltstones of the Coleman Member, Gowganda Formation (Paleoproterozoic, 2.288 b.y.).  Published literature on the Cobalt Mining District has shown that the hydrothermal veins intruded through their host rocks at about 2.217 billion years (~mid-Paleoproterozoic).  Hydrothermal vein mineralization appears to have been generated by, or related to, intrusion of the Nipissing Diabase Sill, a widespread, 300 meter thick unit in this area.

 


 

Photo gallery of silver

 


 

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