Detailed information
Species
Ullmannite, Quartz, Tetrahedrite
Dimensions
42 x 34 x 25
mm
Weight
16 g
Locality
Ramsbeck, Bestwig Hochsauerlandkreis, Arnsberg North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Condition
No recorded repairs
Ullmannite is a rare nickel antimony sulphide which occurs quite widely around the world, but very rarely in large, well-formed crystals. This miniature specimen is not from the Type Locality, but is from the same region in Germany - Arnsberg, North Rhine-Westphalia. The Ullmannite forms an aggregate of gun-metal grey cubic crystals upon an aggregate of delicate needle-like Quartz crystals. The Ullmannite crystals reach 4 mm across, but there is some minor abrasion to the largest intergrown crystals. Many of the smaller crystals are well-formed, and cubo-octahedral in form, and there appears to be a single Tetrahedrite microcrystal, as a tarnished grey tetrahedral crystal, and a few tiny Chalcopyrite crystals. It is from the superb systematic collection assembled by the brothers Martin and Michael Günther (1951-2007 & 1956-2021).