A nickel sulfide mineral, NiS, usually occurring in long hairlike crystals and sometimes used as a nickel ore.
[After William Hallowes Miller (1801-1880), British mineralogist.]
Dictionary:
mil·ler·ite (mĭl'ə-rīt') ![]() |
[After William Hallowes Miller (1801-1880), British mineralogist.]
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A mineral having composition NiS and crystallizing in the hexagonal system. Millerite usually occurs in hair-like tufts and radiating groups of slender to capillary crystals. The hardness is 3–3.5 (Mohs scale) and the specific gravity is 5.5. The luster is metallic and the color pale brass yellow. Millerite is found in many localities in Europe, notably in Germany and Czechoslovakia. In the United States it is found with pyrrhotite at the Gap Mine, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania; with hematite at Antwerp, New York; and in geodes in limestone at Keokuk, Iowa. In Canada large cleavable masses are mined as a nickel ore in Lamotte Township, Quebec.
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Environment
In limestone and dolomite, sometimes in ore veins.
Crystal descriptionIts common name, "capillary pyrites," aptly describes the cobwebby crystals. Very rarely does it become coarse enough to show individual hexagonal outlines across any rod in parallel bundles of needles. Also in crusts with columnar fracture.
Physical propertiesBrass yellow. Luster metallic; hardness 3-3Ɖ; specific gravity 5.3-5.6; fracture uneven; cleavages 2 rhombohedral. Brittle, but cobweb threads flexible.
CompositionNickel sulfide (64.7% Ni, 35.3% S).
TestsFuses easily on charcoal in the reducing flame to a black magnetic bead. Gives nickel test (pink needles in ammonia-neutralized nitric acid solution) with dimethylglyoxime.
Distinguishing characteristicsThe capillary crystals could only be confused with capillary tourmaline or rutile, neither of which would fuse on charcoal, nor would they be found in the same associations. The nickel test would distinguish it from similarly colored sulfides.
OccurrenceMillerite is sometimes valued as an ore of nickel when present in minor quantities in association with other metallic sulfides in middle-temperature veins, as in Germany and the massive Sudbury, Ontario, sulfide complex. Locally it is sparsely distributed through limestones in central Mississippi Valley limestone quarries, particularly near St. Louis, Missouri, and Keokuk, Iowa. At these places long millerite hairs are found in cavities lined with crystals of calcite, dolomite, and fluorite. (An interesting, if improbable, speculation suggests the original source of this nickel might be a heavy Paleozoic meteor shower.) Coarser millerite needles have been found with hematite in Antwerp, New York, and in Alamos, Mexico.
| WordNet: millerite |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a yellow mineral consisting of nickel sulfide; a minor source of nickel
| Wikipedia: Millerite |
| Millerite | |
|---|---|
| General | |
| Category | Mineral |
| Chemical formula | nickel sulfide:NiS |
| Identification | |
| Color | Brass yellow |
| Crystal habit | typically acicular (needle-like) often in radial sprays - also massive |
| Crystal system | Trigonal bar 3 2/m |
| Cleavage | perfect 3 directions - obscured by typical form |
| Fracture | uneven |
| Mohs scale hardness | 3 - 3.5 |
| Luster | metallic |
| Streak | dark green to almost black |
| Specific gravity | 5.3 - 5.5 |
| Refractive index | opaque |
| Other characteristics | brittle and becomes magnetic on heating |
Millerite is a nickel sulfide mineral, NiS. It is brassy in colour and has an acicular habit, often forming radiating masses and furry aggregates. It can be distinguished from pentlandite by crystal habit, its duller colour, and general lack of association with pyrite or pyrrhotite.
Contents |
Millerite is a common metamorphic mineral replacing pentlandite within serpentinite ultramafics. It is formed in this way by removal of sulfur from pentlandite or other nickeliferous sulfide minerals during metamorphism or metasomatism.
Millerite is also formed from sulfur poor olivine cumulates by nucleation. Millerite is thought to form from sulfur and nickel which exist in pristine olivine in trace amounts, and which are driven out of the olivine during metamorphic processes. Magmatic olivne generally has up to ~4000ppm Ni and up to 2500ppm S within the crystal lattice, as contaminants and substituting for other transition metals with similar ionic radii (Fe2+ and Mn2+).
During metamorphism, sulfur and nickel within the olivine lattice are reconsitituted into metamorphic sulfide minerals, chiefly millerite, during serpentinization and talc carbonate alteration. When metamorphic olivine is produced, the propensity for this mineral to resorb sulfur, and for the sulfur to be removed via the concomittant loss of volatiles from the serpentinite, tends to lower sulfur fugacity.
This forms disseminated needle like millerite crystals disprsed throghout the rock mass.
Millerite may be associated with heazlewoodite and is considered a transitional stage in the metamorphic production of heazlewoodite via the above process.
Millerite, when found in enough concentration, is a very important ore of nickel because, for its mass as a sulfide mineral, it contains a higher percentage of nickel than pentlandite. This means that, for every percent of millerite, an ore contains more nickel than an equivalent percentage of pentlandite sulfide.
Millerite forms an important ore constituent of the Silver Swan, Wannaway, Cliffs, Honeymoon Well, Yakabindie and Mt Keith (MKD5) orebodies. It is an accessory mineral associated with nickel laterite deposits in New Caledonia.
Millerite is found as a metamorphic replacement of pentlandite within the Silver Swan nickel deposit, Western Australia, and throughout the many ultramafic serpentinite bodies of the Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia, generally as a replacement of metamorphosed pentlandite.
It is commonly found as radiating clusters of acicular needle-like crystals in cavities in sulfide rich limestone and dolomite or in geodes. It is also found in nickel-iron meteorites, such as CK carbonaceous chondrites.[1]
Millerite was discovered by Wilhelm Haidinger in 1845 in the coal mines of Wales. It was named for British mineralogist William Hallowes Miller. The mineral is quite rare in specimen form, and the most common source of the mineral is the in Halls Gap area of Lincoln County, Kentucky in the United States.
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