Description
This remarkable Rheniite is originally from the Kudriavy Volcano in Russia, and it’s now waiting to come home with you!
Rheniite is one of the very rare representations of Rhenium as its found naturally, being one of the only two (or three) minerals to be comprised of Rhenium and Sulfur known to date.
As this is such a rare mineral, along with Tarkianite, and the semi-famous Rhenium-bearing Molybdenite found in the Childs-Aldwinkle and Bou Azzer Mines is even more rare, approximately 80% of all Rhenium is instead extracted from porphyry molybdenum deposits, according to Wikipedia; some of which, contain as much as 0.001% to 0.2% Rhenium. Worldwide production of Rhenium is between 40-50 tons annually, with the big producers being Chile, the US, Peru, and Poland. 70% of the Rhenium produced annually is then used for jet engines, with the rest going to catalyzing reactions to produce gasoline, as an x-ray source or thermocouple when alloyed with Tungsten, as well as in mass spectrometers, and to treat cancer.
Rheniite was only just discovered in 2004 (in active hot fumaroles on the slopes of the very location from where this specimen was found), just after Tarkianite was found in Finland the year before. It doesn’t yet have a hardness listed on Wikipedia or Mindat, but Minerals.net claims its hardness is 1.5, and according to Mindat, its calculated specific gravity is 7.598. Next to minerals containing Rhodium and Hafnium, Rhenium-bearing minerals are the most difficult to acquire and are some of the most expensive rocks on the internet. Meanwhile, you can get nearly 150 grams of purified Rhenium for the same price from Luciteria!
As stated above, this comes from Russia, as does what seems to be most all other Rheniite specimens, but there are just as many (if not more) localities outside of Russia, including two in Greece, one in Austria, one in Botswana, one in Brazil, and one in Ontario, Canada. While there haven’t yet been even a dozen discovered localities for Rheniite, it may still be in your area, so be sure to keep an eye out for a shiny rock like this on your next hike!
ColoRockCo has read Rhenium has been found in Colorado on a few pages of Mindat that are a little obscured and unclear and has tried a few times to find some, but hopefully, with some persistence and even more incredible luck, hopefully in the future, you will be able to watch along (or invest and partner up in opening a Re mine) while the discovery is attempted and made, high up in the mountains… While the determination is there, lives have been spent looking unsuccessfully, so don’t get your hopes up. However, you’ll soon be able to see some pretty beautiful rockhounding – high above treeline, in one of Colorado’s most beautiful calderas!
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