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Albertite

A variety of Petroleum
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About AlbertiteHide

Colour:
Black
Lustre:
Resinous, Waxy, Greasy
Hardness:
Specific Gravity:
1.097
Name:
Named by Charles A. Hitchcock in 1865 for the Albert Formation in Albert county, New Brunswick, from where it was first described and was commercially mined.
A variety of Bitumen

A variety of asphaltum (mineral asphalt) from which the volatile components have evaporated, leaving a harder and less soluble substance with a glistening pitch-like luster. Used for carvings as a jet simulant.


Unique IdentifiersHide

Mindat ID:
25570 (as Albertite)
9532 (as Petroleum)
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:1:25570:3 (as Albertite)
mindat:1:1:9532:3 (as Petroleum)
GUID
(UUID V4):
dc82bf28-83d0-407a-b411-35ae9527f8f8 (as Albertite)
d6f62b20-1a81-4f0d-90ac-d323753c2d31 (as Petroleum)

Pronunciation of AlbertiteHide

Pronunciation:
PlayRecorded byCountry
Jolyon RalphUnited Kingdom

Physical Properties of AlbertiteHide

Resinous, Waxy, Greasy
Transparency:
Opaque
Colour:
Black
Hardness:
2½ on Mohs scale
Hardness Data:
Measured
Tenacity:
Brittle
Density:
1.097 g/cm3 (Measured)    

First Recorded Occurrence of AlbertiteHide

Common AssociatesHide

Associated Minerals Based on Photo Data:
6 photos of Albertite associated with QuartzSiO2
5 photos of Albertite associated with CalciteCaCO3
3 photos of Albertite associated with PrehniteCa2Al2Si3O10(OH)2

Fluorescence of AlbertiteHide

Not fluorescent in UV

Other InformationHide

Health Risks:
No information on health risks for this material has been entered into the database. You should always treat mineral specimens with care.

Internet Links for AlbertiteHide

References for AlbertiteHide

Localities for AlbertiteHide

This map shows a selection of localities that have latitude and longitude coordinates recorded. Click on the symbol to view information about a locality. The symbol next to localities in the list can be used to jump to that position on the map.

Locality ListHide

- This locality has map coordinates listed. - This locality has estimated coordinates. ⓘ - Click for references and further information on this occurrence. ? - Indicates mineral may be doubtful at this locality. - Good crystals or important locality for species. - World class for species or very significant. (TL) - Type Locality for a valid mineral species. (FRL) - First Recorded Locality for everything else (eg varieties). Struck out - Mineral was erroneously reported from this locality. Faded * - Never found at this locality but inferred to have existed at some point in the past (e.g. from pseudomorphs).

All localities listed without proper references should be considered as questionable.
Canada (FRL)
 
  • New Brunswick
    • Albert Co.
      • Hillsborough Parish
Blake (1890) +3 other references
France
 
  • Nouvelle-Aquitaine
    • Pyrénées-Atlantiques
      • Bayonne
        • Arbouet-Sussaute
Analysis from CRG (Centre d'Etudes Gemmologiques de l'Université de Nantes/France) +1 other reference
Germany
 
  • Lower Saxony
    • County of Bentheim District
      • Bad Bentheim
UK
 
  • Scotland
    • Highland
      • Dingwall and Seaforth
Richard Tayler specimens
    • West Lothian
      • Linlithgow
Meikle (1994)
USA
 
  • Connecticut
    • Hartford County
      • East Granby
John Burnham
John Burnham
  • Massachusetts
    • Hampden County
      • West Springfield
Sam Pavadore collection
  • New Jersey
    • Somerset County
      • Bernards Township
Betts (n.d.)
 
Mineral and/or Locality  
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