A remarkable discovery of electrum on the island of Sylt, northern Germany, and its Scandinavian origin

<p>An electrum–quartz pebble with a weight of 10.4 g was discovered in a cliff of Saalian glaciogenic sediments on the west coast of the German North Sea island of Sylt in 2012. It has a roundish water-worn appearance and consists of intergrown electrum and milky quartz. It is the largest know...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J. Schlüter, S. Schuth, R. O. C. Fonseca, D. Wendt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2021-07-01
Series:European Journal of Mineralogy
Online Access:https://ejm.copernicus.org/articles/33/373/2021/ejm-33-373-2021.pdf
id doaj-de1cc0e951dd45bfb64dd1ca537c3a47
record_format Article
spelling doaj-de1cc0e951dd45bfb64dd1ca537c3a472021-07-14T08:23:07ZengCopernicus PublicationsEuropean Journal of Mineralogy0935-12211617-40112021-07-013337338710.5194/ejm-33-373-2021A remarkable discovery of electrum on the island of Sylt, northern Germany, and its Scandinavian originJ. Schlüter0S. Schuth1S. Schuth2R. O. C. Fonseca3R. O. C. Fonseca4D. Wendt5Mineralogisches Museum, Centrum für Naturkunde (CeNak), Universität Hamburg, Grindelallee 48, 20146 Hamburg, GermanyInstitut für Mineralogie, Leibniz Universität Hannover, Callinstraße 3, 30167 Hannover, GermanyInstitut für Geologie, Mineralogie und Geophysik, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Universitätsstraße 150, 44780 Bochum, GermanyInstitut für Geowissenschaften, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, Poppelsdorfer Schloss, 53115 Bonn, GermanyInstitut für Geologie, Mineralogie und Geophysik, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Universitätsstraße 150, 44780 Bochum, Germanyindependent researcher: Hamburg, Germany<p>An electrum–quartz pebble with a weight of 10.4 g was discovered in a cliff of Saalian glaciogenic sediments on the west coast of the German North Sea island of Sylt in 2012. It has a roundish water-worn appearance and consists of intergrown electrum and milky quartz. It is the largest known electrum find in Germany, and regarding its weight it also ranks amongst the largest gold finds discovered in Germany. We document and characterize this unusual discovery. Furthermore, an attempt is made to investigate its provenance. Therefore, reference samples of southern Scandinavian gold and electrum deposits and occurrences have been studied and compared to the Sylt find. The Au–Ag content determined by electron microprobe (EMP), trace element signature measured by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), and Pb isotope compositions by multi-collector ICP MS (MC-ICP-MS) suggest a southern Norwegian origin. The most probable source might be the Kongsberg ore district or an adjacent, yet undiscovered, mineralization in the Oslo region.</p> <p>In general, Saalian glaciogenic sediments in Schleswig-Holstein (northern Germany) are dominated by rocks of Swedish provenance. Due to the intake of older Elsterian sediments by younger Saalian glaciers, southern Norwegian rocks are also not uncommon in Saalian sediments. A Saalian ice advance or a combination of Elsterian and Saalian ice advances might have provided a transport mechanism for an electrum sample from a south Norwegian mineralization to the island of Sylt.</p>https://ejm.copernicus.org/articles/33/373/2021/ejm-33-373-2021.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. Schlüter
S. Schuth
S. Schuth
R. O. C. Fonseca
R. O. C. Fonseca
D. Wendt
spellingShingle J. Schlüter
S. Schuth
S. Schuth
R. O. C. Fonseca
R. O. C. Fonseca
D. Wendt
A remarkable discovery of electrum on the island of Sylt, northern Germany, and its Scandinavian origin
European Journal of Mineralogy
author_facet J. Schlüter
S. Schuth
S. Schuth
R. O. C. Fonseca
R. O. C. Fonseca
D. Wendt
author_sort J. Schlüter
title A remarkable discovery of electrum on the island of Sylt, northern Germany, and its Scandinavian origin
title_short A remarkable discovery of electrum on the island of Sylt, northern Germany, and its Scandinavian origin
title_full A remarkable discovery of electrum on the island of Sylt, northern Germany, and its Scandinavian origin
title_fullStr A remarkable discovery of electrum on the island of Sylt, northern Germany, and its Scandinavian origin
title_full_unstemmed A remarkable discovery of electrum on the island of Sylt, northern Germany, and its Scandinavian origin
title_sort remarkable discovery of electrum on the island of sylt, northern germany, and its scandinavian origin
publisher Copernicus Publications
series European Journal of Mineralogy
issn 0935-1221
1617-4011
publishDate 2021-07-01
description <p>An electrum–quartz pebble with a weight of 10.4 g was discovered in a cliff of Saalian glaciogenic sediments on the west coast of the German North Sea island of Sylt in 2012. It has a roundish water-worn appearance and consists of intergrown electrum and milky quartz. It is the largest known electrum find in Germany, and regarding its weight it also ranks amongst the largest gold finds discovered in Germany. We document and characterize this unusual discovery. Furthermore, an attempt is made to investigate its provenance. Therefore, reference samples of southern Scandinavian gold and electrum deposits and occurrences have been studied and compared to the Sylt find. The Au–Ag content determined by electron microprobe (EMP), trace element signature measured by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), and Pb isotope compositions by multi-collector ICP MS (MC-ICP-MS) suggest a southern Norwegian origin. The most probable source might be the Kongsberg ore district or an adjacent, yet undiscovered, mineralization in the Oslo region.</p> <p>In general, Saalian glaciogenic sediments in Schleswig-Holstein (northern Germany) are dominated by rocks of Swedish provenance. Due to the intake of older Elsterian sediments by younger Saalian glaciers, southern Norwegian rocks are also not uncommon in Saalian sediments. A Saalian ice advance or a combination of Elsterian and Saalian ice advances might have provided a transport mechanism for an electrum sample from a south Norwegian mineralization to the island of Sylt.</p>
url https://ejm.copernicus.org/articles/33/373/2021/ejm-33-373-2021.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT jschluter aremarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT sschuth aremarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT sschuth aremarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT rocfonseca aremarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT rocfonseca aremarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT dwendt aremarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT jschluter remarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT sschuth remarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT sschuth remarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT rocfonseca remarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT rocfonseca remarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
AT dwendt remarkablediscoveryofelectrumontheislandofsyltnortherngermanyanditsscandinavianorigin
_version_ 1721303306389684224