Name/Title
Pyrite DollarsEntry/Object ID
2014.1.86Description
Assemblage Zone: pegmatitic dikes
Chemical Composition: FeS2
Crystal System: Cubic or Isometric S
Description: Common Name: Pyrite
Chemistry: FeS2, Iron Sulfide
Class: Sulfides
Group: Pyrite
Location: Unknown
Description: 2 pieces of slate with "Pyrite Suns" or "Dollars". Specimen "A" is a large, triangular piece and has three "Pyrite Suns", (2 1/2", 2" and 1 1/2"). Specimen "B" is a smaller piece of slate with two "Suns", (2 1/4" and 2". These occurences are also refered to as "Marcasite Suns or Dollars".
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS:
Color is brassy yellow.
Luster is metallic.
Transparency: Crystals are opaque.
Crystal System is isometric; bar 3 2/m
Crystal Habits include the cube, octahedron and pyritohedron (a dodecahedron with pentagonal faces) and crystals with combinations of these forms. Good interpenetration twins called iron crosses are rare. Pyrite is commonly found in nodules. A flattened nodular variety called "Pyrite Suns" or "Pyrite Dollars" is popular in rock shops. Also massive or reniform and replaces other minerals and fossils forming pseudomorphs or copies.
Cleavage is very indistinct.
Fracture is conchoidal.
Hardness is 6 - 6.5
Specific Gravity is approximately 5.1+ (heavier than average for metallic minerals)
Streak is greenish black.
Other Characteristics: Brittle, striations on cubic faces caused by crossing of pyritohedron with cube. (note - striations on cube faces also demonstrate pyrite's lower symmetry). Pyrite (unlike gold) is not malleable.
Associated Minerals are quartz, calcite, gold, sphalerite, galena, fluorite and many other minerals. Pyrite is so common it may be quicker to name the unassociated minerals.
Best Field Indicators are crystal habit, hardness, streak, luster and brittleness.
Fracture: conchoidal
Hardness: 6 Orthoclase
Luster: Metallic
Occurrence: Occurs in rocks, intramagnetic deposits, hydrothermal veins, as concretion in sediments, in metamorphic deposits.
Rock Color: Light
Rock Type: Igneous
Specific Gravity: 5.1+
Streak: Greenish Black
Texture: Crystaline
Variety: Pyrite is the classic "Fool's Gold". There are other shiny brassy yellow minerals, but pyrite is by far the most common and the most often mistaken for gold.
Pyrite is a polymorph of marcasite, which means that it has the same chemistry, FeS2, as marcasite; but a different structure and therefore different symmetry and crystal shapes. Pyrite is difficult to distinguish from marcasite when a lack of clear indicators existsCollection
RAGM Mineral CollectionAcquisition
Accession
2014.1Source or Donor
Crater Rock Museum (unknown donors)Acquisition Method
GiftDimensions
Width
11 inDepth
1 inLength
16 inDimension Notes
Dimension taken at widest pointsLocation
Location
Cabinet
I-1 frontWall
NorthBuilding
Storage (old gift shop upstairs)Category
Permanent