Cassiterite is a tin oxide mineral, tin dioxide. It is generally opaque, but it is translucent in thin crystals. Its luster and multiple crystal faces produce a desirable gem. Cassiterite was the chief tin ore throughout ancient history and remains the most important source of tin today.
Cassiterite is a widespread minor constituent of igneous rocks. The Bolivian veins and the 4500 year old workings of Cornwall and Devon, England, are concentrated in high temperature quartz veins and associated with granite Intrusive rock. The veins commonly contain tourmaline, topaz, fluorite, apatite, wolframite, molybdenite, and arsenopyrite. The mineral occurs extensively in Cornwall as surface deposits on Bodmin Moor, for example, where there are extensive traces of a hydraulic mining method known as streaming. The current major tin production comes from placer or alluvial deposits in Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, the Maakhir region of Somalia, and Russia. Hydraulic mining methods are used to concentrate mined ore, a process which relies on the high specific gravity of the SnO2 ore, of about 7.0.
Cassiterite is also used as a gemstone and collector specimens when quality crystals are found.
αὐτὰρ ἐπεὶ δὴ τεῦξε σάκος μέγα τε στιβαρόν τε,Translated as:610τεῦξ᾽ ἄρα οἱ θώρηκα φαεινότερον πυρὸς αὐγῆς,
τεῦξε δέ οἱ κόρυθα βριαρὴν κροτάφοις ἀραρυῖαν
καλὴν δαιδαλέην, ἐπὶ δὲ χρύσεον λόφον ἧκε,
then wrought he for him a Corslet brighter than the blaze of fire, and he wrought for him a heavy helmet, fitted to his temples, a fair helm, richly-dight, and set thereon a crest of gold; and he wrought him Greave of pliant tin. But when the glorious god of the two strong arms had fashioned all the armourLiddell-Scott-Jones suggest the etymology to be originally Elamite language; citing the Babylonia kassi-tira, hence the sanskrit kastīram. However the Akkadian word (the lingua franca of the Ancient Near East, including Babylonia) for tin was " anna-ku" (cuneiform: 𒀭𒈾). Roman Ghirshman (1954) suggests, from the region of the Kassites, an ancient people in west and central Iran; a view also taken by J D Muhly. There are relatively few words in Ancient Greek at begin with "κασσ-"; suggesting that it is an ethnonym. Attempts at understanding the etymology of the word were made in antiquity, such as Pliny the Elder in his Historia Naturalis (book 34 chapter 37.1):
" White lead (tin) is the most valuable; the Greeks applied to it the name cassheros".
And Stephanus of Byzantium in his Ethnica states:
"Κασσίτερα νησοσ εν τω Ωκεανω, τη Ίνδικη προσεχης, ως Διονυσιοσ εν Βασσαρικοισ. Εξ ης ο tin."Which can be translated as:
Kassitera, an island in the Persian Gulf, neighbouring India, as Dionysius states in the Bassarika. From there comes tin.
File:Cassiterite.jpg|Cassiterite bipyramids, edge length , Sichuan, China Image:Cassiterite - Blue Tier tinfield, Tasmania, Australia.jpg|Close up of cassiterite crystals, Blue Tier tinfield, Tasmania, Australia File:Cassiterite-43265.jpg|"Wood tin" cassiterite. Durango, Mexico
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