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Millerite or nickel blende is a , . It is brassy in colour and has an acicular habit, often forming radiating masses and furry aggregates. It can be distinguished from by crystal habit, its duller colour, and general lack of association with or .


Paragenesis
Millerite is a common metamorphic mineral replacing within . It is formed in this way by removal of sulfur from pentlandite or other nickeliferous sulfide minerals during or .

Millerite is also formed from sulfur poor 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. olivine generally has up to ~4000 ppm Ni and up to 2500 ppm S within the , as contaminants and substituting for other with similar ionic radii (Fe2+ and Mn2+).

During metamorphism, sulfur and nickel within the olivine lattice are reconstituted into metamorphic sulfide minerals, chiefly millerite, during serpentinization and alteration. When metamorphic olivine is produced, the propensity for this mineral to resorb sulfur, and for the sulfur to be removed via the concomitant loss of volatiles from the serpentinite, tends to lower sulfur .

This forms disseminated needle like millerite crystals dispersed throughout the rock mass.

Millerite may be associated with and is considered a transitional stage in the metamorphic production of heazlewoodite via the above process.


Economic importance
Millerite, when found in enough concentration, is a very important ore of because, for its mass as a sulfide mineral, it contains a higher percentage of nickel than . 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 deposits in .


Occurrence
Millerite is found as a metamorphic replacement of within the Silver Swan nickel deposit, Western Australia, and throughout the many ultramafic serpentinite bodies of the , Western Australia, generally as a replacement of metamorphosed pentlandite. There is one known occurrence of millerite in South Africa, near Pafuri in the Transvaal. The deposit has never been commercially mined.

It is commonly found as radiating clusters of acicular needle-like crystals in cavities in sulfide rich and dolomite or in . It is also found in nickel-iron , such as CK carbonaceous chondrites.

Millerite was discovered by Wilhelm Haidinger in 1845 in the coal mines of . 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 in the Halls Gap area of Lincoln County, Kentucky in the .


See also
  • List of minerals
  • List of minerals named after people
  • Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania


External links

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