Albert E. Foote visited the Copper Queen Mine about 1890, where he obtained two specimens containing unknown minerals. He could only associate them with
anatase, but he thought it unlikely that the minerals were any form of titanium oxide. The specimens were sold to Clarence M. Bement at fifty dollars apiece, and with his permission, were studied by George Augustus Koenig. Bement's collection, including the specimens of paramelaconite, were purchased by
J. P. Morgan in 1900 and given to the
American Museum of Natural History. Owing to its unique appearance, Koenig assigned the mineral as a new species. His description of the mineral appeared in an 1892 publication of the
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. He named the mineral
paramelaconite from the Greek παρά, meaning "near", and the mineral melaconite (now known as
tenorite), for its compositional similarity to melaconite. At the time, however, the mineral was not recognized as a valid species. Clifford Frondel studied the mineral in more detail and published his results in the journal
American Mineralogist in 1941. When the
International Mineralogical Association was founded in 1959, paramelaconite was
grandfathered as a valid mineral species. In the early 1960s, the third known specimen of paramelaconite was discovered from the Copper Queen Mine; Koenig donated it to the
A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum. Other specimens in the museum, labeled as originating from the Algomah Mine in
Ontonagon County, Michigan, were also found to contain paramelaconite. The
type material is held at the A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum in Houghton, Michigan, the
American Museum of Natural History in New York City,
Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the
National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., and the
Natural History Museum in London. == References ==