English
Etymology
Greek: fire + silver
Noun
pyragyrite
- (mineralogy): Ruby silver; dark red silver ore. It
is a sulphide of antimony and silver, Ag3SbS3,
occurring in rhombohedral crystals or
massive, and is of a dark red or black color with a metallic
adamantine luster; it
is an important silver ore
Pyrargyrite is a
sulfosalt
mineral consisting of
silver sulfantimonide,
Ag3SbS3. Known also as dark red silver
ore or ruby silver, it is an
important source of the metal.
It is closely allied to, and isomorphous with,
the corresponding sulfarsenide known as
proustite or light red silver
ore. Ruby silver or red silver ore (German Rotgiiltigerz) was
mentioned by
Georg
Agricola in
1546, but the two
species so closely resemble one another that they were not
completely distinguished until chemical analyses of both were
made.
Both crystallize in the ditrigonal pyramidal
(hemimorphic-hemihedral) class of the
rhombohedral system,
possessing the same degree of symmetry as
tourmaline. Crystals are
perfectly developed and are usually prismatic in habit; they are
frequently attached at one end, the hemimorphic character being
then evident by the fact that the oblique striations on the prism
faces are directed towards one end only of the crystal.
Twinning
according to several laws is not uncommon. The hexagonal prisms of
pyrargyrite are usually terminated by a low hexagonal pyramid or by
a drusy basal plane.
The color of pyrargyrite is usually greyish-black
and the lustre metallic-adamantine; large crystals are opaque, but
small ones and thin splinters are deep ruby-red by transmitted
light, hence the name, from the
Greek pyr
and argyros, "fire-silver" in allusion to color and silver content,
given by
E. F.
Glocker in
1831. The streak is
purplish-red, thus differing markedly from the scarlet streak of
proustite and affording a ready means of distinguishing the two
minerals. The
Mohs
hardness is 2.75, and the
specific
gravity 5.85. The refractive indices (nω=3.084 nε=2.881) and
birefringence (δ=0.203) are very high. There is no very distinct
cleavage and the fracture is conchoidal. The mineral occurs in
metalliferous veins with
calcite, argentiferous
galena, native silver, native
arsenic, &c. The
best crystallized specimens are from
St
Andreasberg in the
Harz,
Freiberg in
Saxony, and
Guanajuato in
Mexico. It
is not uncommon in many silver mines in the
United
States, but rarely as distinct crystals; and it has been found
in some
Cornish
mines.
Although the red silver ores afford a good
example of isomorphism, they rarely form mixtures; pyrargyrite
rarely contains as much as 3% of arsenic replacing
antimony, and the same is true
of antimony in proustite. Dimorphous with pyrargyrite and proustite
respectively are the rare
monoclinic species
pyrostilpnite or
fireblende (Ag3SbS3) and
xanthoconite
(Ag3AsS3): these four minerals thus form an isodimorphous
group.
References
pyrargyrite in Catalan: Pirargirita
pyrargyrite in German: Pyrargyrit
pyrargyrite in Italian: Pirargirite
pyrargyrite in Dutch: Pyrargyriet
pyrargyrite in Japanese: 濃紅銀鉱
pyrargyrite in Polish: Pirargyryt
pyrargyrite in Russian: Пираргирит
pyrargyrite in Slovak: Pyrargyrit
pyrargyrite in Ukrainian:
Піраргірит