Dictionary Definition
limonite n : a widely occurring iron oxide ore; a
mixture of goethite and hematite and lepidocrocite
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
limonite- any of several natural hydrous iron oxides; often a mixture of goethite and hemite with clays and manganese oxide
Extensive Definition
Limonite is an ore consisting in a mixture of
hydrated iron(III)
oxide-hydroxide of varying composition. The generic formula is
frequently written as FeO(OH)·nH2O, although this is not entirely
accurate as limonite often contains a varying amount of oxide
compared to hydroxide.
Together with hematite, it has been mined as ore for the
production of iron.
Limonite is heavy and yellowish-brown. It is a very common
amorphous substance though can be tricky to find when mined with
hematite and bog ore.
It is not a true mineral and it is composed by a
mixture of similar hydrated iron oxide
minerals, mostly goethite with lepidocrocite, jarosite, and others. Limonite
forms mostly in or near oxidized iron and other metal ore deposits
and as sedimentary
beds. Limonite may occur as the cementing material in iron rich
sandstones. Also known
as the Lemon Rock.
It is never crystallized into macroscopic
crystals, but may have a fibrous or microcrystalline structure, and
commonly occurs in concretionary forms or in compact and earthy
masses; sometimes mammillary, botryoidal, reniform or
stalactitic. The colour presents various shades of brown and
yellow, and the streak is always brownish, a character which
distinguishes it from hematite with a red, or from magnetite with a
black streak. It is sometimes called brown hematite or brown iron
ore.
Limonite has been known to form pseudomorphs after other
minerals such as pyrite,
meaning that the chemical weathering transforms the crystal of
pyrite into limonite but keeps the external shape of the pyrite
crystal. It has also been formed from other iron oxides, hematite
and magnetite; the carbonate siderite and iron rich
silicates like some garnets.
It is named from the Greek word
for meadow, in allusion to its occurrence as "bog-ore" in
meadows and marshes.
The
hardness is variable, but generally in the 4 - 5.5 range. The
specific
gravity varies from 2.9 to 4.3.
Uses of limonite
In the past bog ore or brown iron ore were mined as a source of iron. Iron caps or gossans of siliceous iron oxide typically forms as the result of intensive oxidation of sulfide ore deposits. These gossans were used by prospectors as guides to buried ore. In addition the oxidation of sulfide deposits which contained gold mineralization often resulted in the concentration of gold in the iron oxide and quartz of the gossans.Gold bearing limonite gossans were productively
mined in the Shasta
County, California mining district. Similar deposits were mined
near Rio
Tinto in Spain and Mount
Morgan in Australia. In the
Dahlonega
gold belt in Lumpkin
County, Georgia gold was mined from limonite rich lateritic or saprolite soil. The gold of
the primary veins was concentrated into the limonites of the deeply
weathered rocks. In another example the deeply weathered iron
formations of Brazil served to
concentrate gold with the limonite of the resulting soils.
Limonite from occurrences with consistent color
is used as the yellow-brown natural earth pigment ochre.
See also
External links
limonite in Czech: Limonit
limonite in German: Limonit
limonite in Estonian: Limoniit
limonite in Spanish: Limonita
limonite in French: Limonite
limonite in Hebrew: לימוניט
limonite in Lithuanian: Limonitas
limonite in Japanese: 褐鉄鉱
limonite in Polish: Limonit
limonite in Portuguese: Limonite
limonite in Romanian: Limonit
limonite in Russian: Лимонит
limonite in Simple English: Limonite
limonite in Slovak: Limonit
limonite in Swedish: Limonit