{{Short description|Rare rock comprising a mixture of metals}} thumb|right|Polished {{Convert|2.9|oz|adj=on}} mohawkite nugget thumb|Mohawkite nugget
'''Mohawkite''' is a rare rock consisting of mixtures of arsenic, silver, nickel, skutterudite and copper, with the formula Cu<sub>3</sub>As up to Cu<sub>6</sub>As, and the most desirable material was usually found in a white quartz matrix.<ref name=lynch/> It has a hardness of 3–3.5 and a metallic luster.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.gemdat.org/gem-2740.html |title=Mohawkite |website=Gemdat |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |accessdate=January 22, 2014}}</ref> It is named after the Mohawk Mine, where it was originally found. Colors range from brassy-yellow to metallic gray, and sometimes will have a blue or greenish surface tarnish. These colors come from its two main ingredients, the arsenic-rich copper minerals algodonite and domeykite. Its color may resemble pyrrhotite, but unlike pyrrhotite, mohawkite is not magnetic.<ref name=lynch>Lynch, Dan R., and Bob Lynch. "Mohawkite." Michigan Rocks & Minerals. Ed. Brett Ortler. N.p.: Adventure Publications, n.d. N. pag. Print. {{ISBN|978-1591932390}}</ref>
==Etymology and origin== Mohawkite is believed to be found only in a copper mine located on the Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan, known as the Mohawk Mine. The Mohawk Mine is where mohawkite was first discovered, in January 1900, near the No. 1 shaft when a fissure vein of copper ore was cut. Specimens of this ore were sent to George A Koenig, of the Michigan College of Mines (now known as Michigan Technological University) for analysis. The ore was believed to be an entirely new mineral and was named mohawkite by Koenig.<ref name=WMR2>{{cite book |title=World Mines Register, Volume 2 |year=1902 |publisher=Miller Freeman Publications |pages=205–207 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Sp83AQAAMAAJ}}</ref> A reanalysis of the material in 1971 found it to be an intimate mixture of copper and nickel arsenides and the mohawkite name was discredited as a mineral species.<ref>Moore, Paul B.; ''Copper-Nickel Arsenides of the Mohawk No. 2 Mine, Mohawk, Keweenaw Co., Michigan,'' American Mineralogist, V. 56, July-August, 1971 [http://www.minsocam.org/ammin/AM56/AM56_1319.pdf PDF]</ref>
==Uses== Mohawkite, being a copper ore, is used for obtaining copper. However, when the copper is removed, it is toxic due to the amount of arsenic in it. Mohawkite, particularly when it contains quartz, is often used in jewelry because of its appearance.{{cn|date=September 2013}}
==See also== * Discovery of mohawkite at the Mohawk Mine * Keweenawite – another discredited mineral species discovered in the Mohawk mine
==References== {{Reflist}}
==External links== {{wiktionary}} *[http://www.mindat.org/min-2740.html Mohawkite] at [http://www.mindat.org/ Mindat]
Category:Rocks Category:Geology of Michigan