,
Cripple Creek, Colorado. Largest crystal is 9 mm Calaverite occurrences include
Cripple Creek,
Colorado, Calaveras County, California, US (from where it gets its name), Nagyag,
Romania,
Kirkland Lake Gold District,
Ontario,
Rouyn District,
Quebec, and
Kalgoorlie, Australia.
History Calaverite was first recognized and obtained in 1861 from the Stanislaus Mine, Carson Hill,
Angels Camp, in Calaveras Co., California. Genth found that the telluride formula for calaverite generally corresponded with the gold-silver telluride mineral sylvanite, but had a far lower percentage of ionic silver in place of ionic gold (3 to 3.5% in Genth's analysis, vs. 11 to 13% silver typical for sylvanite). Since silver is isomorphous with gold in telluride minerals (i.e. gold atoms replace silver without automatically changing the crystal character), Genth more importantly reported the calaverite differed from sylvanite in having no distinct crystalline cleavage line, whereas sylvanite was known to have a distinct line of cleavage. (As discussed above, both sylvanite and calaverite have since been found to be basically monoclinic, whereas the third known gold-silver telluride mineral
krennerite is orthorhombic, with yet a different characteristic line of cleavage parallel to the crystal base). Genth was later also able to characterize a sample of calaverite from Boulder, Colorado, finding that his two specimens from that location were 2.04 and 3.03% silver. In the initial phase of the
Kalgoorlie gold rush in Western Australia in 1893, large amounts of calaverite were initially mistaken for
fool's gold, and were discarded. The mineral deposits were used as a building material, and for the filling of potholes and ruts. Several years later, the nature of the mineral was identified, leading to a second gold rush of 1896 that included excavating the town's streets. ==See also==