48 
'saloon, brown-ore, brunon (sphene, and titane siliceo-cal- 
Nat. hist, caire Hauy), among the varieties of which is that 
in large flat octohedral crystals from Norway, 
with epidote, &c. ; also the variety called, by 
Saussure, rayonnante en gouttiere, from St. Go- 
thard, on feldspar, with chlorite, &c.— Titan-shorl, 
also called rutile; massive, crystallized, and fi¬ 
brous, to which latter belongs the variety with 
golden tarnish, from Moutier, near the Mont- 
blanc; the acicular crystals of rutile in rock 
crystal, &c.; the ferriferous oxides , some varieties 
of which may be considered as titaniferous oxides 
of iron, and to which may be referred the black 
sand called menachanite , and the iserine, in loose 
grains and imbedded ;—specimens of anatase , or 
octohedrite, from Dauphine;—the scarce sub- 
stance called craitonite ( [crichtonite ), by the Comte 
de Bournon, likewise from Dauphine* in very acute 
octohedral crystals, and in thin laminse. 
The remainder of this glass case contains the ores 
of antimony : native antimony , from Allemont, and 
from Sala in Sweden, some varieties of which are 
arseniferous;— sulphuret of antimony , or grey an¬ 
timony, the most common ore of this metal oc¬ 
curs compact, foliated, radiated, and plumose: 
the more remarkable among them are the speci¬ 
mens of crystallized radiated antimony in fine 
groups, especially from Transylvania; radiated 
grey antimony with barytes, realgar, &c.; the 
plumose grey antimony, some varieties of which, 
appearing 
