AUSTRALIAN MINERALS. 



A large and most important consignment has just 

 reached us from Australia, embracing quite a number of 

 minerals never before or but rarely offered for sale in 

 America, besides many very choice specimens of the 

 well-known Broken Hill minerals which were first promi- 

 nently brought to the attention of mineral collectors in 

 general by our large purchases a few years since. The 

 shipment has been unpacked and inspected, but is not 

 yet priced up and may not be on sale before February 

 16th. A partial list of the thousand or more specimens 

 follows : 

 Atacamite ; 240 good cabinet and museum size speci- 

 mens, mostly well crystallized. 



Cuprite ; 25 matrix groups and 300 small groups and loose crystals, some 

 exceedingly Sue.* 



Copper ; 35 small and cabinet size groups, many of remarkably well-formed 

 crystals, others beautifully arborescent. 



Cobaltite and Smaltite ; 50 cabinet size specimens, including a number of 

 excellent matrix groups of crystals. 

 Molybdenite; 40 showy specimens. 



Sylvanite ; 13 excellent specimens from the new find in West Australia. 

 Gold ; 50 assorted specimens, a number very good. 

 Selenite ; 10 good, lenticular crystals. 



Cassiterite ; 8 specimens, partly crystallized or in large rolled pebbles. 

 ' Azurite ; a very few extra fine loose crystals and matrix specimens. 

 Chalcopyrite ; 10 large interesting crystals and groups. 

 Pyromorphite ; 20 brown groups, some of them extra fine. 

 Embolite and Cerargyrite; 60 specimens, large and small, many splendid 

 crystallizations. 



Iodyrite ; 20 specimens, several extra fine. 



Cerussite and Anglesite ; 80 specimens, many of them in exceedingly fine 

 crystals and groups. 



Stolzite ; 6 crystallized specimens. 

 Marshite ; one large group. 

 Smithsonite ; 10 excellently crystallized. 



REMARKABLE MILLERITES FROM IOWA. 



We now have on sale a most remarkable collection of specimens of matted 

 needles of Millerite on crystallized Calcite,* or enclosed in Calcite. Besides a 

 show case full of museum-size specimens there are three drawers full of cabinet 

 sizes. Prices very reasonable. 



EXTRA CHOICE STILBITE AND CHABAZITE. 



Just received ; over a hundred extraordinarily beautiful red Chabazites, with 

 excellent sheaves of richly-colored Stilbite ; 10c. to 75c. 



A NEW IMPORTATION OF SWISS MINERALS. 



Rose Fluor ite crystals on matrix, fine Brookites, ffeulandite, Smoky Quartz, Apa- 

 tite, etc. A small lot of extra good, little specimens. 



OTHER RECENT ADDITIONS. 



Nine new mineral species from Greenland; splendid matrix specimens of Parisite 

 from Montana; many new species and interesting minerals from Franklin: 

 beautiful, emerald-greeen cleavage octahedrons of Fluorite ; splendid Covellite ; 

 choice groups of Datolite ; polished sections of Quartz enclosing Tourmaline 

 needles ; choice polished Williamsite ; remarkable Flexible Sandstone ; and hosts 

 of other desirable minerals. 



124 pp. Illustrated Catalogue, giving Dana Species number, hardness, specific 

 gravity, chemical composition and formula of every mineral, 25c. in paper, 50c. 

 in cloth. 



44 pp. Illustrated Price-Lists, also Bidletins and Circulars free. 



GEO. L. ENGLISH & CO., Mineralogists, 

 812 and 814 Greenwich Street (S. W. Corner of Jane Street), New York City. 



