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Background: Commencing in early 1992, 1 began finding cube-shaped, mostly orange-red colored garnets in the heavy mineral concentrates of Rock Run, a small Montgomery County, Maryland stream about 9 kilometers long which flows southeasterly from just north of Potomac Village to the Potomac River. Their typical shapes were like sharp cubes except that the faces were slightly convex and seemed to have many circular growth hillocks. I had been panning only since mid-1991, and had discovered that I could find many interesting and beautiful micromineral specimens for my micromounting interests by examining the black sands under my microscope. At first, I would find these very tiny (from I mm. to less than 0.1 mm.) cubic forms very infrequently, but I saved them, believing that someday I. would get them identified. Later in 1992, several members of my micro club, Micromineralogists of the National Capital Area, said they believed them to be garnet cleavage fragments, though they were not sure. I still suspected that they were natural garnet crystals, and to me, they did not appear to be fragments because the shape seemed to be too consistently perfect. They did not seem to have the vitreous surface I had become familiar with among the many garnet fragments encountered in the black sands of not only Rock Run, but most of the other County streams For nearly the next two years, I continued with my micromounting interests and gold panning, and continued to find occasional "cubics" in Rock Run. (Rock Run is my favorite stream for gold panning, because there I found enough gold to make the three rings for my 1994 engagement and wedding!) Geology:
Minerals I have noted in stream concentrates include: actinolite, anatase, columbite/tantalite,epidote, feldspars (albite,amazonite, perthite), garnet (almandine, spessartine and several other populations), gold, hafnon/zircon, hematite, limonite pseudomorphs after pyrite, magnetite, mica (biotite, muscovite, zinnwaldite, sericite), monazite, pyrite, quartz, rutile, schorl, staurolite, zircon and some others. (The underlined minerals came from only one stream location, Lamberton Branch, which crosses a complex pegmatite just south of the old Kensington Mica Mine in Montgomery County). Identification:
At the Conference in March that year, I met Vandall King for the first time and he offered to have the Rock Run cubics identified for me. I gave him two of the Rock Run specimens, which he promptly forwarded to the late Eugene Foord at the U. S. Geological Survey in Denver, Colorado for examination and analysis. Foord completed his work on them later that year and by the time of the 23rd Rochester Mineralogical Symposium (RMS) in April 1996, he included his findings in a paper he presented there, entitled "Cubic and Octahedral Garnets: Maryland, USA, Brazil, and Italy". In it, he wrote: "Cubic reddish spessartine (RI, XRD, EDS, this study) crystals (1 mm) have been found as isolated crystals along with other detrital minerals (dodecahedral almandine, magnetite, limonite pseudomorphs after pyrite, epidote, rutile, gold, etc.) in sand from Rock Run, Montgomery County, Maryland. The Maryland cubic garnets are similar in appearance to the Brazilian cubic almandines." He described the Brazilian almandines as follows: "The Brazilian cubic almandines are transparent, equidimensional crystals (1-2 mm) without matrix. The crystals have rounded, slightly convex faces that have razor sharp intersections. The convex faces are patterned with myriad tightly overlapping circular to elliptical growth mounds, some of which are smooth, but most of which are pitted or have growth hillocks ...... Later,, in the popular annual RMS feature, 'What's New in Minerals?" Vandall King, Steve Chamberlain, and Jeffrey Scovil, wrote: "Jack Nelson has been panning gold from Rock Run, Montgomery County, Maryland. Being a micromounter, he examined some of the minerals in his heavy mineral concentrates ... and found some cubic orange to orange brown garnet crystals! The cubes (to 1 mm) are pure forms with no modifications, but do show rounding and orange-peel surface texture as is common with cubic garnets from other localities. Gene Foord chemically analyzed, X-rayed, and measured the refractive indices and showed that the cubes are ferroan spessartine. The cubic garnets are probably the first found in the U.S.A." Further finds:
I continued to examine the heavy mineral concentrates from other new locations in Maryland and Virginia, and even one location in southeastern Pennsylvania. In September 1996 1 found 20 cubic garnets in Long Branch, a stream in Arlington, Virginia, adjacent to the Nature Center where our club conducts its meetings. Long Branch flows through similar geologic structures as Rock Run does. A month later, the heavy mineral concentrates from a tiny unnamed tributary to Byrd Creek,, about 2 miles from the town of Caledonia, Fluvanna County, Virginia yielded yet another cubic garnet. All the Maryland and Virginia cubes are similar in color and appearance. I then began to examine the concentrates I had, saved from the other fifty or so stream locations I had visited since I began panning in 1991. In two of the samples I have found cubic garnets and both of those streams flow through similar geologic formations as Rock Run. One of those two streams, Lamberton Branch, also crosses a complex pegmatite about a quarter mile southwest of the old Kensington Mica Mine, in the Kemp Mill section of Silver Spring, Maryland. Foord speculated that these pegmatites could also be a source for cubic spessartines. Are cubic garnets rare?
It will be interesting to see how many more "finds"' of cubic garnets can be made as more people search the streams in their local areas. The author encourages all who may find any to contact him with information. Intermediate Crystal Forms:
Foord stated that the Brazilian cubic almandines show an "occasional isolated face at the intersection of the three cube faces", but that the isolated faces "are irregular and have not been identified." I have noticed that a considerable percentage (perhaps 30%) of the "cubics" that I have found in Rock Run and Long Branch seem to have unusual striated faces located just between adjoining cube faces (the striations are perpendicular to the intersection of the cube faces). So, as there are combinations and modifications of the predominant dodecahedral and trapezohedral garnet forms, there appears to be modifications among some of the pure cubes, as well. Cubic Garnets Make Ideal Micromounts:
References: Foord, E. E., and V. King, 1996, "Cubic and Octahedral Garnets: Maryland, USA, Brazil and Italy". Program Notes, 23rd Rochester Mineralogical Symposium, P. 11, 41. King, V., S. Chamberlain, and J. Scovil, "What's New in Minerals".
Good, R.S., O.M. Fordham, Jr., C.R. Halladay, 1977,
Reed, J. C., Jr., and J. C. Reed, 1969, "Gold Veins Near Great Falls,
Maryland". U.
Foord, E., Personal communications, 1996, 1997. Eaton, W., Personal communications, 1996-1998. Ream,, L., Personal communications,, 1998.
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