Galena

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Galena

General
Category Sulfides
Chemical formula lead sulfide (PbS)
Identification
Color Lead gray, silvery
Crystal habit Cubes, tabular and sometimes skeletal crystals
Crystal system Isometric hexoctahedral
Cleavage Cubic
Fracture Flat (when cubic) to even
Mohs Scale hardness 2.5 - 2.75
Luster Metallic
Refractive index Opaque
Pleochroism None
Streak Lead gray
Specific gravity 7.4 - 7.6
Fusibility 2

Galena is the natural mineral form of lead sulfide. It is the most important lead ore mineral.

Galena is one of the most abundant and widely distributed sulfide minerals. It crystallizes in the cubic crystal system often showing octahedral forms. It is often associated with the minerals sphalerite, calcite and fluorite.

Contents

Galena deposits often contain significant amounts of silver as included silver sulfide mineral phases or as limited solid solution within the galena structure. These argentiferous galenas have long been the most important ore of silver in mining. In addition zinc, cadmium, antimony, arsenic and bismuth also occur in variable amounts in lead ores. Selenium substitutes for sulfur in the structure constituting a solid solution series. The lead telluride mineral altaite has the same crystal structure as galena. Within the weathering or oxidation zone galena alters to anglesite (lead sulfate) or cerussite (lead carbonate).

Galena from Poland
Galena from Poland

Galena deposits are found in France, Romania, Austria, Belgium, Italy, Spain, Scotland, England, Australia, and Mexico. Noted deposits include those at Freiberg, Saxony; Cornwall, Derbyshire, and Cumberland, England; the Sullivan mine of British Columbia; and Broken Hill, Australia. Galena also occurs at Mount Hermon in Northern Israel. In the United States it occurs most notably in the Mississippi Valley type deposits of southeastern Missouri and in similar environments in Illinois, Iowa and Wisconsin. Galena also was a major mineral of the zinc-lead mines of the tri-state district arpond Joplin in southwestern Missouri and the adjoining areas of Kansas and Oklahoma. Galena is also an important ore mineral in the silver mining regions of Colorado, Idaho, Utah and Montana. Of the latter, the Coeur d'Alene district of northern Idaho was most prominent.


Galena is the official state mineral of Missouri and Wisconsin, USA.

Dark gray cubes of galena with fluorite (purple) and calcite (white) from Illinois, USA
Dark gray cubes of galena with fluorite (purple) and calcite (white) from Illinois, USA

One of the earliest uses of galena was as kohl, which in Ancient Egypt was applied around the eyes to reduce the glare of the desert sun and to repel flies, a potential source of disease.[1]

Galena was once used as a semiconductor (i.e. the crystal) in crystal radio sets; combined with a safety pin or similar sharp wire (known as a "cat's whisker"), the galena crystal became part of a point-contact diode used to detect radio signals.

  1. ^ Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Art of Medicine in Ancient Egypt. (New York: The Museum, 2005), p. 10, ISBN 1-58839-170-1

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