GoGuides Verified Text

ARGENTITE

SHA-256 integrity check: match
Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:argentite:c8555366eb33
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
34ebeafa980ab1679a4fe5d0796310c408202e88b6f5471b7689e096afe1ed4d
Computed Hash
34ebeafa980ab1679a4fe5d0796310c408202e88b6f5471b7689e096afe1ed4d
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:42:41
Source URL

Verified Text

argentite, a mineral which belongs to the galena group, and is cubic silver sulphide (ag2s). it is occasionally found as uneven cubes and octahedra, but more often as dendritic or earthy masses, with a blackish lead-grey colour and metallic lustre. the cubic cleavage, which is so prominent a feature in galena, is here present only in traces. the mineral is perfectly sectile and has a shining streak; hardness 2.5, specific gravity 7.3. it occurs in mineral veins, and when found in large masses, as in mexico and in the comstock lode in nevada, it forms an important ore of silver. the mineral was mentioned so long ago as 1529 by g. agricola, but the name argentite (from the lat. _argentum_, "silver") was not used till 1845 and is due to w. von haidinger. old names for the species are glaserz, silver-glance and vitreous silver. a cupriferous variety, from jalpa in tabasco, mexico, is known as jalpaite. acanthite is a supposed dimorphous form, crystallizing in the orthorhombic system, but it is probable that the crystals are really distorted crystals of argentite. (l. j. s.)