Ramsdellite is formed by oxidization of weathered manganese minerals such as
manganite, and is often found in deposits containing various other manganese oxides. The mineral is relatively rare. The
type locality, the place where Ramsdellite was first identified, is the
Lake Valley district in
Sierra County, New Mexico, US. Other locations in the USA where well-characterized samples of Ramsdellite have been found are
Artillery Mountains, Arizona; Mistake mine,
Yavapai County, Arizona; Idarado mine, near
Telluride, Colorado; and Monroe-Tener mine, near
Chisholm, Minnesota. Good samples have been found in Canada along the East River in
Pictou County, Nova Scotia; in Mexico in Los Gavilanes,
Baja California; In India in Dongari Buzurg,
Bhandara, Maharashtra; in Australia in the Iron Monarch quarry,
Iron Knob, South Australia; in Japan in the Otoshibetsu and Tanno mines,
Hokkaido; in the Czech Republic at
Horní Blatná; in Germany at Bütten-Adenstadt,
Lower Saxony and Clara Mine, near
Oberwolfach, Black Forest; in Egypt at Gebel To Yu, Yoider, and Um Bogna; and in South Africa at Hotazel, near
Kuruman, Northern Cape. Ramsdellite is found in the manganese deposits near
Moanda, Haut-Ogooué Province, Gabon, mined by the
Compagnie minière de l'Ogooué. These deposits were formed by
supergene enrichment of
Precambrian sediments. ==Notes==