Secondary Copper Minerals

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 76

  • @hutchinsonsolarlunarplanet538
    @hutchinsonsolarlunarplanet538 2 года назад +12

    I've learned more about copper minerals and minerals associated with them in this video than I have learned in the past 40 years in rock hunting! Detailed/clear/no nonsense way of teaching a audience about geology/rocks. SUBSCRIBED!!!!

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +6

      I hate long winded RUclips videos too. I'm here to transfer information, not to maximize ads watched.

    • @hutchinsonsolarlunarplanet538
      @hutchinsonsolarlunarplanet538 2 года назад +2

      @@GeologyUpSkill Great point. Keep up the EXCELLENT work. I crave what you know, (on the subject of Geology) just like millions of others out there in RUclips land.

  • @iannewman4391
    @iannewman4391 2 года назад +10

    Black looking oxides can also be tested for copper by scratching them to form a powder, adding a drop of HCl, then mixing it with the clean tip of a standard metal nail where the copper will plate onto the nail.

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +5

      Yep, that trick is explained in the full version of the video.

    • @mandobob
      @mandobob Год назад

      Just bag it and have the lab analyze. No muss no fuss!

  • @darkh2o716
    @darkh2o716 Год назад +1

    I definitely enjoy the channel. Having a couple semesters of Chemistry and a Geo 101 make your presentations even more positive. These videos certainly enhance my prospecting adventures and general knowledge as well. Keep up the excellent content. Thanks.

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  Год назад

      Hopefully I will encourage a few more people to understand and enjoy what geology has to offer. Not just geologists!

  • @wittywobbafet5433
    @wittywobbafet5433 2 года назад +1

    short but very informative :)
    as a young professional geologist who loves minerals and exploration geology this video is very helpful and inspiring

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +1

      That's great. I trying to inspire more geologists!

  • @michiganprospectors
    @michiganprospectors 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for the very good information. I am learning about the copper ores that I am finding in the mine tailings piles. Your video quality and clarity was awesome.

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад

      Thanks. Hope it helps you find more copper!

    • @michiganprospectors
      @michiganprospectors 2 года назад

      @@GeologyUpSkill I am going to watch this a few more times before I go back up. Thanks.

  • @javier090994
    @javier090994 2 года назад +1

    I loved it! Thanks Nick!

  • @jaxonhay2009
    @jaxonhay2009 Год назад +3

    Here in Butte Chalcanthite and other copper sulfates can be easy to confuse with azurite. They are water soluble and will not react with HCl.

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  Год назад +2

      That's true. Chalcanthite is also a little softer than azurite, but difficult to determine in small crystals.

    • @blackpowder4016
      @blackpowder4016 Год назад +1

      Brochantite, antlerite, and melanterite are also commonly mistaken for their more famous cousins.

    • @nicktate2089
      @nicktate2089 Год назад

      @@blackpowder4016 usually some atacamite also if you have that set.

  • @themainediverschannel4495
    @themainediverschannel4495 2 года назад +2

    Learned alot on this video. I found some copper precipitate mixed within a predominant vesicular basalt groundmass several months ago and decided to take it out of storage and examine it more closely in my lab. I'm going to attempt to extract the copper from the basalt. Should be pretty interesting whatever the outcome. Great video!!!!

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +2

      Just occasionally, vesicular basalts contain native (metallic) copper. You can usually only see it in a fresh broken piece because it gets coated in green secondary minerals after it has been exposed to the air for a while.

    • @themainediverschannel4495
      @themainediverschannel4495 2 года назад +1

      @@GeologyUpSkill specimens we're retrieved in an area of a predominance of rhyolite. It's a mountain region with an oregeny of 24-36 million years old (Oligocene/Miocene). After failure of obtaining no copper sulfate precipitate in samples I placed some of sample from the bottom of beaker onto a microscope slide. I observed grains of isometric/cubicle in shape (possible rhyolitic groundmass?) Instead of a misdiagnosed basalt? I based my beginning statement as a 'vesicular basalt' sample because of observed filled cavities of green colored material. Another hastily mistaken observation it would seem. Other microscope grains observed threw the microscope were what appeared to be grains of peridoitite? Red colored grains as well.

    • @themainediverschannel4495
      @themainediverschannel4495 2 года назад +2

      @@GeologyUpSkill in the end the quartz grains in the micro sample had me leaning towards a rhyolite with some unknown green material imbedded within the greyish colored groundmass. Whole specimen displaying as a porphyry.

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +1

      @@themainediverschannel4495 If it contains quartz grains then it is more likely to be rhyolite than basalt. The greenish grains may be chlorite which contains no copper.

    • @themainediverschannel4495
      @themainediverschannel4495 2 года назад +1

      @@GeologyUpSkill thank you! Your information coming in certainly begins to narrow it down!

  • @SenorTucano
    @SenorTucano 2 года назад +1

    Looks pretty, great grades alive the water table and usually nothing below it.

  • @laosgpsmapmidnitemapper9411
    @laosgpsmapmidnitemapper9411 Год назад +1

    Enriching experience Mr Tate!

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  Год назад +1

      That's the general idea of mineral exploration!

  • @renatogonzalez6868
    @renatogonzalez6868 3 месяца назад +1

    Great video, thank you.
    I have a question, is it possible to find secondary minerals like malachite directly associated with a primary mineral like chalcopyrite?.
    Gretings from Ecuador

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  3 месяца назад

      Yes it is possible a little above the water table where chalcopyrite is only partially oxidised, but most locations at surface the chalcopyrite is completely oxidised away and you only see malachite and some boxworks where the chalcopyrite used to be.

  • @mysteriousdude280
    @mysteriousdude280 3 месяца назад +1

    Hello, can you do one with regard to coltan and minerals associated with them please

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  3 месяца назад

      If I work on a project with coltan I certainly will.

  • @sadamahmed8271
    @sadamahmed8271 9 месяцев назад +1

    It's amazing i like it ❤

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  9 месяцев назад

      Thank you. Glad you found it useful.

  • @geradkavanagh8240
    @geradkavanagh8240 2 года назад +1

    Knowing your in the Mount Isa area. Wondering if any turquoise has been found in Phosphate Hill area? Can you do a video of the Schist and staurolite (Maltese cross) area south of Mount Frosty? Found abundant examples of the same minerals in your video many years ago at the Hard Rock mine halfway between Mount Isa and Mary Kathleen. Was near the Aboriginal Sun Rock site.

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +1

      The Mt Isa area is an endless source of great outcrops and specimens for video.

    • @geradkavanagh8240
      @geradkavanagh8240 2 года назад

      @@GeologyUpSkill Small Uraninium deposits North East of Lake Moondarra. I know this because of a geology field trip with Geiger counters when I was a kid. They area was more low rolling hills with basaltic outcrops compared to the steep rocky hills closer to Isa.

  • @marthalamba844
    @marthalamba844 2 года назад +2

    What about the ones that looks completely greyish but heavy .

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +1

      That is most likely chalcocite.

    • @marthalamba844
      @marthalamba844 2 года назад

      @@GeologyUpSkill I wish I can send pictures

  • @adahharuna7610
    @adahharuna7610 2 года назад +2

    Amazing study and simple explanation. If you are to be my teacher, I will be the best student online and offline.

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад

      One of the great things about RUclips is that there is no limit to the number of students who can benefit from the knowledge you share. Offline teaching is more fun, but the reach cannot compare!

  • @conniemarie333
    @conniemarie333 2 года назад +2

    is there a website with pictures that list the gaps/holed that signify what mineral is being leached?

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад

      The best resource for that is a book Gossans and Leached Cappings Field Assessment by Roger Taylor

  • @Respect1-z
    @Respect1-z 5 месяцев назад

    0:24

  • @皓天红狐
    @皓天红狐 2 года назад

    Some are very similar to the stones on the mountains in our hometown. How did they form?

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад

      By weathering of primary copper minerals (most commonly chalcopyrite). How those primary copper minerals got in to the rock is a long and interesting story which is why I studied geology!

  • @richardhaselwood9478
    @richardhaselwood9478 2 года назад +1

    How hot is FNQ at the moment? The Bowen Basin is hot enough, don't want to think about Cloncurry/Mt Isa

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +1

      This video was shot on a November morning. If you look closely at some of the shots, you will see the rocks shimmering due to heat distortion of the air between the specimen and the camera.

  • @mohs7234
    @mohs7234 Год назад

    I've noticed a yellowing on large boulder of malachite.
    I even found a chunk of this yellow rock that was hard & solid enough to polish.
    Due to it being heavily silicified. Rare. As most of is crumbly.
    My found piece really took a good polish. A bright sun yellow.
    I keep trying to find more of it ha.
    Does limonite form on these copper type of boulder?
    Any idea what yellowing is? Thanks

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  Год назад +1

      Harder yellow oxide minerals are often jarosite that commonly forms where there is lots of pyrite beneath the weathering zone. Mixtures of jarosite and silica can make them hard enough to take a polish so I suspect you are correct there.

    • @mohs7234
      @mohs7234 Год назад

      Thanks for mentioning jarosite
      Never heard of it
      A picture on the wiki page
      Sure does resemble my piece
      I visited your web page
      Maybe during the summer months
      When hounding is off limits
      Due to nothing butte hot rocks
      I can join
      sure do hit on many of the types of geology
      I explore
      Thanks

  • @heritierkamwanya71
    @heritierkamwanya71 Год назад +1

    hello sir, please how to have the videos, then is it certified or is it just the videos? because I need all this knowledge

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  Год назад +1

      I don't have this course accredited for professional development since it is just a random collection of the useful things that I find in the field. Perhaps I should make it more complete so it could become certified professional development, but that would make it more expensive :(

  • @donlawler9510
    @donlawler9510 2 месяца назад +1

    liked and subscribed

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 месяца назад

      Thanks very much. Every subscriber is appreciated.

  • @heritierkamwanya71
    @heritierkamwanya71 Год назад +1

    Bonjour mr je répond au nom de heritier kamwanya, juste pour savoir le prix pour le vidéo il y as que des vidéo ou bien il y 'aurais aussi un certificat de cette formation ?

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  Год назад +1

      Pour l'instant, il ne s'agit que d'une collection de vidéos. Vous pouvez choisir ceux qui vous intéressent. Vous n'êtes pas obligé de les regarder tous pour obtenir un certificat.

    • @heritierkamwanya71
      @heritierkamwanya71 Год назад

      @@GeologyUpSkill merci pour la réponse, pour payer on versé l'argent ou puis ?

    • @heritierkamwanya71
      @heritierkamwanya71 Год назад

      Est-ce que vous pouvez m'orienter ou trouver une formation en géologie minières certifiée ?

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  Год назад

      @@heritierkamwanya71 La plupart des formations de premier cycle menant à un diplôme en géologie se déroulent dans les universités. Si vous avez déjà obtenu un diplôme de géologue, recherchez des cours proposant un développement professionnel certifié (CPD).

  • @canadiangemstones7636
    @canadiangemstones7636 2 года назад +1

    Budding geologists: decent crystals of azurite, chalcocite, and cuprite are highly valued by collectors, and malachite and turquoise are valuable gemstones. If you find interesting specimens in your travels, get in touch with a mineral dealer. Good specimens and cutting material can be very profitable to mine, even on a small scale. A single outstanding piece can bring four or five figures. Don’t send them to the smelter for ten cents worth of copper content!

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +1

      That conundrum has always been an issue for mines. Many of them prohibit mineral collection because they fear it will result in a conflict of interest for employees and a danger for visitors. One exception in my experience was the Zaaiplaats tin mine in South Africa (now closed). They actively mined specimens in large vughs in the host granite. Many 5 figure museum quality specimens came out of that mine.

  • @edyyjogangchannel7288
    @edyyjogangchannel7288 2 года назад +1

    copper ore,blue and green colour..

  • @Respect1-z
    @Respect1-z 5 месяцев назад +1

    I have

  • @mostafayousif47
    @mostafayousif47 2 года назад +1

    Hey Mr.Nick
    l am a geologist from Egypt and hope to contact with you... You are a great geologist

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +3

      Thanks. I am trying to help every young geologist become a great geologist :)

  • @noeryip5954
    @noeryip5954 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thankyou. I've founded like that stone😅😅

  • @ToastytheG
    @ToastytheG 3 месяца назад +1

    Real ones will go to the link in the description and purchase the Fieldcraft for Geologists course. Nick Tate is a towering Golden God. We are not worthy!

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  3 месяца назад

      I much appreciate those who purchase the fieldcraft course. Every one of them helps me to make more videos and that helps to bring the free versions to thousands of people who don't have the resources to learn.

  • @DimasFajar-ns4vb
    @DimasFajar-ns4vb 16 дней назад +1

    yeah lithium battery and electric motor use copper sir

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  9 дней назад

      They do indeed, and the world will want a lot more of those in future.

  • @goldadventureacehtenggarag1816
    @goldadventureacehtenggarag1816 2 года назад

    Can't you cek my spiciment rock gold

    • @GeologyUpSkill
      @GeologyUpSkill  2 года назад +1

      There is an old saying about gold specimens: "If there's any doubt, there's no doubt". Meaning that when you see real gold, it is really obvious. If you are at all unsure, then you can be certain that it's something else.