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Kishu Mine

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Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1975
American Mineralogist (1975) 60 (3-4): 240–248.
... single crystal methods. Pyrrhotite crystals from the Kishu mine are mixtures of three 4 C , 4.88 C , and 5 C types. The 5 C type is orthorhombic and has the cell dimensions a = 6.8848(14), b = 11.936(6), c = 28.6760(15), and diffraction aspect C*ca . In the Kohmori mine, various orthorhombic pyrrhotites...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 August 2010
Economic Geology (2010) 105 (5): 1025–1037.
... for the Sudbury Copper Cliff North pyrrhotite are also similar to that obtained by Morimoto et al. (1975b) for 5C pyrrhotite from the Kishu mine in Japan. Similar to the pyrrhotite examined by Morimoto et al. (1975b) , the Sudbury Copper Cliff North pyrrhotite displays orthorhombic symmetry. It should be noted...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2011
Earth Sciences History (2011) 30 (1): 176–184.
... and accommodation). Geology of the Outer Zone of Southwest Japan: accretionary complex of the Shimannto Terrain. Visits to Shinto shrines and pilgrimage routes; Kiwa Mine Museum, Kishu Mine, Nachi Waterfall (World Heritage Site); lodging at Koya-san Buddhist temple; Temples at Nara and Kyoto. (N.B. The region...
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 1978
Journal of the Geological Society (1978) 135 (4): 389–406.
... southern Kyushu to the Fossa Magna. Tin and arsenic deposits are limited to Kyushu Island, while tungsten deposits, though small in scale, are known at both ends of the zone. Copper veins are best known in the Kishu and Myoho mines in the Kii Peninsula, central Honshu. Most of the ore deposits are closely...
Series: Geological Society, London, Geology of Series
Published: 01 January 2016
DOI: 10.1144/GOJ.16
EISBN: 9781862397064
.... By the beginning of the eighth century Cu and Sb, and later Sn and Pb in the tenth century, were being produced from the Nagato and Kurameki mines in southwestern Japan in order to manufacture coins (Saito et al. 2002). In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the Ashikaga shogunate and local generals...
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