•
Australia, Kintore open cut: Mottramite is the only
secondary mineral with essential
vanadium recorded from the Kintore open cut,
Broken Hill, Yancowinna County,
New South Wales. It has been found scattered on greenish to yellowish drusy
plumbogummite –
hinsdalite as tiny black glossy pyramids or aggregates of dull black, flattened
bipyramids up to 0.4 mm across. • Australia, Braeside Station: Braeside station is in the Gregory Ranges District,
Shire of East Pilbara,
Western Australia. Both mottramite and
descloizite are common in the central part of the Braeside field. They occur with
vanadinite,
pyromorphite and
cerussite. Descloizite-mottramite was the last to crystallise showing a variety of colours and habits. These include yellow-orange drusy or botryoidal opaque crusts on
chalcedony, brown, olive or yellow flaky wedge-shaped transparent crystals up to 100
micrometres wide that form rosettes in association with
coronadite and
hemimorphite, and short prismatic and
bipyramidal green crystals that form a 10 to 15 micrometre thick crust on
quartz. • Australia, Shangri La: At Shangri La,
Kununurra, Wyndham-East Kimberley Shire, Western Australia, green to brown mottramite forms thin botryoidal crusts of fine-grained, platy crystals on quartz and iron oxides, and may be associated with vanadinite. Some crusts have a radiating internal texture and show a variation in composition from mottramite at their core, to descloizite at their rim. Mottramite generally grew at the same time as vanadinite. • Morocco, Bou Azer: Mottramite is the only vanadium mineral known from the Bou Azer district,
Tazenakht, Ouarzazate Province, Souss-Massa-Draâ Region, Morocco. It has been found as tiny dark brown resinous crystals on a single piece of heavily altered
galena. The specimen shows secondary mineralisation containing
mimetite and possibly
wulfenite. • Russia, Berezovskoe Gold Deposit: Mottramite has been found at the
Berezovskoe gold deposit, Berezovskii, Ekaterinburg, Sverdlovskaya Oblast', in the
Middle Urals. It was found in a quartz vein, in a cavity containing galena,
tetrahedrite and
tennantite, with associated
bushmakinite, cerussite,
bindheimite,
vauquelinite and pyromorphite. • United Kingdom,
Caldbeck Fells: Mottramite occurs at several localities in the Caldbeck Fells, Allerdale, Cumbria, England. • Caldbeck Fells, Arm O'Grain: A variety of supergene minerals occur as microscopic crystals at Arm O'Grain, Caldbeck Fells. These include mimetite, pyromorphite, vanadinite,
duftite, plumbogummite and
beudantite, as well as mottramite. Mottramite is the commonest of them. It occurs as black elongated boat shaped crystals up to about one mm long, scattered over white vein quartz. Occasionally, crusts of mottramite occur in cavities in the quartz that appear to have been formed by the dissolution of
baryte. Mottramite was almost certainly produced by
oxidation of galena. • Caldbeck Fells, Brandy Gill: Mottramite has been reported from Brandy Gill,
Carrock Fell, Caldbeck Fells as minute yellowish green globular aggregates associated with
bayldonite,
malachite and mimetite, and as olive-green pyramidal crystals associated with bayldonite,
beaverite and beudantite. The primary
sulfide minerals at Brandy Gill are galena,
chalcopyrite and
arsenopyrite. • Caldbeck Fells, Ingray Gill: Minute drusy yellow to yellow-brown mottramite crusts made up of characteristic boat-shaped crystals a few tens of micrometres across cover specimens from the mine dump at Ingray Gill, Caldbeck Fells. Mottramite encrusts mimetite and white to pale green pyromorphite
epimorphs after galena. It is one of the most common supergene minerals at Ingray Gill, but because of its colour and habit it is easily mistaken for pyromorphite or mimetite. • Caldbeck Fells, Low Pike: Several supergene minerals including bayldonite, beudantite,
brochantite,
cornwallite, duftite, malachite, mimetite,
philipsburgite and
pseudomalachite as well as mottramite occur in thin fractures in quartz at
Low Pike, Caldbeck Fells. • Caldbeck Fells, Balliway Rigg: Mottramite is rare at Balliway Rigg. It has been found as minute olive green pyramidal crystals on hemimorphite and chrysocolla and as scattered yellow to yellow-brown blocky crystals on lavender-blue plumbogummite. It also occurs as minute brown pyramidal crystals on green pyromorphite. The largest crystals are a few tenths of a millimetre across. • Caldbeck Fells, Brae Fell Mine: Mottramite is quite common on the mine dump at
Brae Fell Mine, Roughton Gill, Caldbeck Fells, as coatings of minute rice-grain shaped crystals less than 0.1 mm long on quartz. The crystals are dark brown to buff in colour, often associated with pyromorphite, and occasionally associated with cerussite. • Caldbeck Fells, Sandbed Mine: A yellow-brown crust on samples from the dumps of the Sandbed mine has been identified as mottramite. • US, Brown Monster Mine and Reward Mine: Mottramite is relatively common at the Brown Monster Mine and Reward Mine, Russ District,
Inyo County,
California. It forms pale yellow-green to tan, brick-red and chocolate brown
botryoidal crusts, commonly associated with mimetite and wulfenite, or with dark reddish-brown vanadinite. • US, Otto Mountain: At Otto Mountain,
Baker,
San Bernardino County, California, mottramite is generally seen as crusts of botryoidal green to olive-green spheres in association with white vanadinite needles. == References ==