Willemite (variety troostite)

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Willemite (variety troostite), 10 cm, from the Sterling Hill mine, Ogdensburg, New Jersey, collected before 1900. This specimen was pictured in The Minerals of New York City and Its Environs (Manchester, 1931). Ex James G. Manchester and Paul Young collections. Photo by Jeff Scovil.

Product details

SizeSmall Cabinet
Dimensions10.0 cm
Added on02/13/2026
Publications
  • Mineralogical Record Mineral Collections In American Northeast page 33

Known provenance

DateCollectorAcquisition price
Paul YoungNot disclosed
James G. ManchesterNot disclosed

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Willemite
Mineral guide
Learn about Willemite
fluorescent zinc silicate with UV glow; daylight colors range from colorless to pistachio, iconic from Franklin–Sterling Hill and Tsumeb.
Willemite
Regional guide
Willemite from Sterling Hill Mine, New Jersey, USA
Sterling Hill willemite is one of the classic collector materials of American mineralogy: a zinc silicate, Zn2SiO4, that can look modest in daylight and then turn electric green under ultraviolet light. In the best pieces, tan to reddish-brown willemite crystals sit in white calcite with black franklinite and, less commonly, red zincite—an ore assemblage so distinctive that even small fragments announce the Franklin-Ogdensburg district at a glance. The daylight palette is earthy and old-mine: mahogany, brick red, honey brown, buff, white, and black. Under shortwave UV, however, willemite becomes the bright green signal in the rock, while calcite may burn red to orange-red and franklinite stays dark.