Poging GOUD - Vrij

Proustite

Rock&Gem Magazine

|

January / February 2026

A Red Silver Treasure

- BOB JONES

Proustite

Today, proustite, a red silver compound, is hard to find. While native gold is rarely found as a compound, silver, on the other hand, forms a variety of wonderful compounds that collectors treasure: waxy-looking chlorargyrite, dark gray to black acanthite, stephanite, polybasite and two sulfosalts, pyrargyrite and proustite.

The red color of these last two silver minerals makes them the most appealing and eagerly sought silver species. Collectors are overjoyed when they obtain a specimen of either of these silver compounds, since today's silver mines rarely encounter such specimens. Many found in the early centuries of silver mining have long since ended up in museums or in private collections.

imageThis choice specimen of proustite shows signs of darkening, but is a fine red, from Freiberg, Saxony, Germany.

Collector's Edge

Pyrargyrite is a silver antimony sulfide, and proustite is a silver arsenic sulfide. Both exhibit a lovely red color, with proustite being the brighter red, hence the general name ruby silver. Both species are rare, with pyrargyrite a little more common.

Of the two, proustite exhibits the richest red color, and when found in quantity in Chanarcillo, Chile, it was given the name Sangre de Torro, or “Blood of the Bull.” Pyrargyrite is a somewhat darker red color and is still occasionally found in silver mines of Mexico.

RED SILVER “SWEETENER”

Some 30 years ago, I was traveling in Mexico visiting silver mines with my son, Evan, and Bill Panczner and his son, Chris. This included a visit to a silver mine at Fresnillo, Chihuahua, Mexico.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

A New Amber Locality Fills a Gap

A sandstone quarry in central Ecuador has yielded the first significant deposit of Mesozoic amber from South America.

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

Did "Left-Handed" Fish Leave Water Earlier than Thought?

Fossil evidence suggests that fish (or \"fishapods\") dragged themselves onto land during the middle Devonian Period.

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

"Lab Quakes” Produce Surprising Results

When faults let loose and earthquakes result, the main effect we mortals experience is the violent shaking.

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

This Egg is No Spring Chicken

How to date a dino egg

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

Have we Already Mined the Critical Minerals We Need

Then why are we throwing them away?!

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

One Toxic Worm

A critter that creates & tolerates orpiment!

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

ROCK & GEM FIELD GUIDE: Silver

Silver (Ag) is a native element and one of Earth's most prized precious metals.

time to read

2 mins

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

DINOSAURS OF THE HELL CREEK MUSEUM

In the Badlands of South Dakota, just outside the small town of Belle Fourche—pronounced “Bell Foosh”—a new attraction has taken shape that every dinosaur enthusiast should see. The Dinosaurs of the Hell Creek Museum is part hands-on exhibit, part science center and part active research lab.

time to read

3 mins

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

The Lost Twins of Kongsberg

A Silver Story Resurfaced

time to read

3 mins

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

Switzerland's ICE PALACE

Walk Inside a Glacier at The Top of Europe

time to read

7 mins

January / February 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size