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sundown57
Joined: 13 Mar 2022
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Location: MA.


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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 10:28 Post subject: is this pyrite? |
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I was given this by a friend that has since passed away. I tried searching the net best i could and it kind of looks like pyrite, only it is very heavy and was cut on a bandsaw like you would a piece of metal. I was wondering if some one here to tell me for sure what it is? thanks
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sundown57
Joined: 13 Mar 2022
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Location: MA.


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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 10:30 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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here is another picture of it.
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Carles Millan
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James Catmur
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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 13:10 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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Check the streak and hardness to get us started
Hardness: 6 – 6.5, i.e. greater than Glass
Streak: Greenish Black
With no tests, it is hard to say
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sundown57
Joined: 13 Mar 2022
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Location: MA.


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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 14:05 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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Yes it will scratch glass quite easily, the streak test is kind on a brass or gold color. The man I got it from traveled a lot and I have no idea where he got it. I will add that it really does seem like a hard metal. there are even a burs in the corners from the cutting.
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Pete Richards
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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 14:19 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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I think you used the right word. This is a metal, not a mineral. Not pyrite. It has well-formed crystals, but as part of a solid mass. It almost certainly is man-made, a smelter product of some sort, but why it should show such well-formed crystals on the edges is unclear.
Doing the standard tests we advise is useful, but only to a limited degree, because you are looking for the identity of something we don't study and collectively have limited knowledge of at best. In addition to hardness, specific gravity might be the most useful test, because specific gravity of common metals would be easy to obtain on the web. The combination of hardness and specific gravity might identify it.
If you could find some local way to get a test done to identify the chemistry, I bet it would contain only one element in any significant amount, and that element would be a fairly common metal.
Good luck!
_________________ Collecting and studying crystals with interesting habits, twinning, and epitaxy |
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Joseph DOliveira

Joined: 29 Jan 2012
Posts: 311
Location: Hanmer, Ontario



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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 14:24 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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I agree, looks very much like a smelter product. It is not uncommon for crystals to form in some of the metal slags during the smelter process. I have observed this in some of the smelter slags here in Sudbury.
Pete Richards wrote: | I think you used the right word. This is a metal, not a mineral. Not pyrite. It has well-formed crystals, but as part of a solid mass. It almost certainly is man-made, a smelter product of some sort, but why it should show such well-formed crystals on the edges is unclear.
Doing the standard tests we advise is useful, but only to a limited degree, because you are looking for the identity of something we don't study and collectively have limited knowledge of at best. In addition to hardness, specific gravity might be the most useful test, because specific gravity of common metals would be easy to obtain on the web. The combination of hardness and specific gravity might identify it.
If you could find some local way to get a test done to identify the chemistry, I bet it would contain only one element in any significant amount, and that element would be a fairly common metal.
Good luck! |
_________________ Joseph D'Oliveira
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sundown57
Joined: 13 Mar 2022
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Location: MA.


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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 14:58 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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what kind of a company would i look for to do a test like that?
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Michael Shaw
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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 15:48 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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Many years ago I purchased an old mineral collection. One of the items in that collection is pictured below. I think you will find that it bears a close resemblance to the item that you posted. The piece pictured was labeled "crystallized titanium rod, synthesized by the van Arkel-de Boer process." You can google this and see other photos of similar items.
Mineral: | Titanium rod |
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Mineral: | Cut end of titanium rod |
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sundown57
Joined: 13 Mar 2022
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Location: MA.


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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 16:33 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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yeah thats exactly like what i have. I take it being man made it has no real value?
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James Catmur
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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 17:20 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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We do not discuss values on this forum. I used to find similar items at work and always threw them away.
sundown57 wrote: | yeah thats exactly like what i have. I take it being man made it has no real value? |
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sundown57
Joined: 13 Mar 2022
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Location: MA.


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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 17:58 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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thank you all for the info, at least i finally know what it is
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Matt_Zukowski
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Posted: Mar 13, 2022 18:13 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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Michael Shaw pulled out an amazingly similar photo to your piece suggesting that it may well be titanium (good catch Michael!). If i *had* to guess, i would say that that is what it is. But it is still possible it is some other metal (or alloy) that just looks like Michael's picture. To know with more certainty, the best bet would be a commercial lab - any largish town will have some chemical lab that can do a quick test for the metallic composition of the piece.
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SteveB
Joined: 12 Oct 2015
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Location: Canberra


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Posted: Mar 14, 2022 16:28 Post subject: Re: is this pyrite? |
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sundown57 wrote: | thank you all for the info, at least i finally know what it is | NO you don’t. No answer has been given nor can it without further testing, a photo of something similar is NOT identification, It caertainly looks metalic in nature, could be waste thats been coated or spray painted really. No idea, You’ve not done anywhere near enough tests to provide data points. Its clearly not a naturally formed mass and so of almost no interest here as this forum if for nature made minerals not man made. I suggest a metalurgy forum, find an assayer labe who can do XRF analysis or similar its likely an alloy of some sort anyway not a pure sample. Just an interesting paperweight could be toxic too without proper identification which is impossble with guesses and photos..
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