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Skipton, Corangamite Shire, Victoria, Australiai
Regional Level Types
SkiptonTown
Corangamite ShireShire
VictoriaState
AustraliaCountry

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PhotosMapsSearch
Type:
Mindat Locality ID:
293519
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:2:293519:8
GUID (UUID V4):
0
Other Languages:
French:
Skipton, Victoria, Australie
Asturian:
Skipton
Dutch:
Skipton, Victoria, Australië
Farsi/Persian:
اسکیپتن، ویکتوریا, ویکتوریا, استرالیا
Hebrew:
סקיפטון, ויקטוריה, אוסטרליה
Polish:
Skipton, Wiktoria, Australia
Urdu:
سکپٹن، وکٹوریہ, وکٹوریہ


Skipton /ˈskɪptən/ is a town in the Western District of Victoria, Australia. The town is situated on the Glenelg Highway 166 kilometres west of the state capital, Melbourne and 52 kilometres southwest of the regional centre, Ballarat. Skipton is in the Shire of Corangamite LGA and is on the banks of Mount Emu Creek. Skipton is named after Skipton, in Yorkshire, England, and is known as "the home of the platypus".

Select Mineral List Type

Standard Detailed Gallery Strunz Chemical Elements

Commodity List

This is a list of exploitable or exploited mineral commodities recorded from this region.


Mineral List

Mineral list contains entries from the region specified including sub-localities

13 valid minerals. 5 (TL) - type locality of valid minerals.

Rock Types Recorded

Note: data is currently VERY limited. Please bear with us while we work towards adding this information!

Rock list contains entries from the region specified including sub-localities

Select Rock List Type

Alphabetical List Tree Diagram

Detailed Mineral List:

Brushite
Formula: Ca(PO3OH) · 2H2O
Description: Brushite at Skipton Caves occurs in two forms: 1. as small pale brown needles and blades up to 3 mm in length usually associated with struvite as either random or inwardly radial orientations. 2. as pale yellow powder in seams and pockets on basalt.
Dittmarite (TL)
Formula: (NH4)Mg(PO4) · H2O
Type Locality:
Description: Occurs in bat guano. Was originally found "in the form of small rhombic transparent crystals". The original material is lost and no other specimens appear to have been collected.
Gypsum
Formula: CaSO4 · 2H2O
Description: Occurs mainly as a damp off-white to pale yellow powder, also rarely as microscopic, equant water-clear crystals.
Hannayite (TL)
Formula: (NH4)2Mg3H4(PO4)4 · 8H2O
Type Locality:
Description: Occurs in bat guano. Hannayite occurs as slender, translucent, near-colourless to pale yellow prisms reaching a maximum size of 12mm long, 2mm wide and approximately 1mm thick.
'Limonite'
Macivorite (TL)
Formula: (NH4)3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
Type Locality:
Magnesite
Formula: MgCO3
Newberyite (TL)
Formula: Mg(PO3OH) · 3H2O
Type Locality:
Description: Newberyite crystals from Skipton Caves show 3 different habits 1- the crystals are tabular, translucent to opaque and grey-brown, with faces of the dominant form being uneven and dull. Complex twinning on these faces produces irregular rosettes of intergrown plates or roughly spheroidal shape which may reach 5 cm across. 2- these crystals are glassy, internally fractured, have lustrous faces and range from pale yellow to a dirty brown colour. Inclusions of guano particles are common. These crystals are usually 0.1-10 mm. 3- less common habit shows features with characteristics of the tabular form and equant habits. These form "skeleton" crystals, in reference to the set of partly separated plates developed parallel to the brachy-pinacoids.
Opal
Formula: SiO2 · nH2O
Description: Parts of the walls in the chambers are covered with small brown stalactites of opaline silica which are no more than 25 mm long and 6 mm diameter.
Sasaite
Formula: (Al,Fe3+)14(PO4)11(SO4)(OH)7 · 83H2O
Description: Sasaite has been found at Skipton Caves as a white clay-like deposit on the surface and in cracks in dark consolidated floor material. It ranges in texture from soft white powdery to compact pale pinkish yellow. It was not found associated with the other phosphate minerals.
Schertelite (TL)
Formula: (NH4)2MgH2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
Type Locality:
Description: Occurs in small colourless flat crystals of somewhat indistinct character. The original material has been lost.
Stercorite ?
Formula: (NH4)Na(PO3OH) · 4H2O
Description: MacIvor (1902) reported sodium ammonium monohydrogen orthophosphate in the aqueous extract separated from guano by repeated crystallisations. This may indicate transient existence of the mineral stercorite in the caves.
Struvite
Formula: (NH4)Mg(PO4) · 6H2O
Description: Occurs in bat guano. Skipton struvite occurs as glassy colourless to very pale yellow triangular prism-shaped crystals, which are usually less than 12 mm across, but may reach 15 mm. The larger crystals are usually etched. Crystals of struvite alter to white opaque newberyite and become fragile upon exposure to air over a period of months to years. Has been found associated with brushite.
Taranakite
Formula: K3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
Description: Reported as a white powdery coating on the exposed surfaces of basalt, and as 0.5 mm sub-spherical growths in basalt boulders.

Gallery:

List of minerals arranged by Strunz 10th Edition classification

Group 4 - Oxides and Hydroxides
Opal4.DA.10SiO2 · nH2O
Group 5 - Nitrates and Carbonates
Magnesite5.AB.05MgCO3
Group 7 - Sulphates, Chromates, Molybdates and Tungstates
Gypsum7.CD.40CaSO4 · 2H2O
Group 8 - Phosphates, Arsenates and Vanadates
Newberyite (TL)8.CE.10Mg(PO3OH) · 3H2O
Dittmarite (TL)8.CH.20(NH4)Mg(PO4) · H2O
Taranakite8.CH.25K3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
Macivorite (TL)8.CH.25(NH4)3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
Schertelite (TL)8.CH.30(NH4)2MgH2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
Hannayite (TL)8.CH.35(NH4)2Mg3H4(PO4)4 · 8H2O
Struvite8.CH.40(NH4)Mg(PO4) · 6H2O
Stercorite ?8.CJ.05(NH4)Na(PO3OH) · 4H2O
Brushite8.CJ.50Ca(PO3OH) · 2H2O
Sasaite8.DB.55(Al,Fe3+)14(PO4)11(SO4)(OH)7 · 83H2O
Unclassified
'Limonite'-

List of minerals for each chemical element

HHydrogen
H BrushiteCa(PO3OH) · 2H2O
H Dittmarite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · H2O
H GypsumCaSO4 · 2H2O
H Hannayite(NH4)2Mg3H4(PO4)4 · 8H2O
H NewberyiteMg(PO3OH) · 3H2O
H OpalSiO2 · nH2O
H Sasaite(Al,Fe3+)14(PO4)11(SO4)(OH)7 · 83H2O
H Schertelite(NH4)2MgH2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
H Stercorite(NH4)Na(PO3OH) · 4H2O
H Struvite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · 6H2O
H TaranakiteK3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
H Macivorite(NH4)3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
CCarbon
C MagnesiteMgCO3
NNitrogen
N Dittmarite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · H2O
N Hannayite(NH4)2Mg3H4(PO4)4 · 8H2O
N Schertelite(NH4)2MgH2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
N Stercorite(NH4)Na(PO3OH) · 4H2O
N Struvite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · 6H2O
N Macivorite(NH4)3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
OOxygen
O BrushiteCa(PO3OH) · 2H2O
O Dittmarite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · H2O
O GypsumCaSO4 · 2H2O
O Hannayite(NH4)2Mg3H4(PO4)4 · 8H2O
O MagnesiteMgCO3
O NewberyiteMg(PO3OH) · 3H2O
O OpalSiO2 · nH2O
O Sasaite(Al,Fe3+)14(PO4)11(SO4)(OH)7 · 83H2O
O Schertelite(NH4)2MgH2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
O Stercorite(NH4)Na(PO3OH) · 4H2O
O Struvite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · 6H2O
O TaranakiteK3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
O Macivorite(NH4)3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
NaSodium
Na Stercorite(NH4)Na(PO3OH) · 4H2O
MgMagnesium
Mg Dittmarite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · H2O
Mg Hannayite(NH4)2Mg3H4(PO4)4 · 8H2O
Mg MagnesiteMgCO3
Mg NewberyiteMg(PO3OH) · 3H2O
Mg Schertelite(NH4)2MgH2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
Mg Struvite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · 6H2O
AlAluminium
Al Sasaite(Al,Fe3+)14(PO4)11(SO4)(OH)7 · 83H2O
Al TaranakiteK3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
Al Macivorite(NH4)3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
SiSilicon
Si OpalSiO2 · nH2O
PPhosphorus
P BrushiteCa(PO3OH) · 2H2O
P Dittmarite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · H2O
P Hannayite(NH4)2Mg3H4(PO4)4 · 8H2O
P NewberyiteMg(PO3OH) · 3H2O
P Sasaite(Al,Fe3+)14(PO4)11(SO4)(OH)7 · 83H2O
P Schertelite(NH4)2MgH2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
P Stercorite(NH4)Na(PO3OH) · 4H2O
P Struvite(NH4)Mg(PO4) · 6H2O
P TaranakiteK3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
P Macivorite(NH4)3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
SSulfur
S GypsumCaSO4 · 2H2O
S Sasaite(Al,Fe3+)14(PO4)11(SO4)(OH)7 · 83H2O
KPotassium
K TaranakiteK3Al5(PO3OH)6(PO4)2 · 18H2O
CaCalcium
Ca BrushiteCa(PO3OH) · 2H2O
Ca GypsumCaSO4 · 2H2O
FeIron
Fe Sasaite(Al,Fe3+)14(PO4)11(SO4)(OH)7 · 83H2O

Fossils

This region is too big or complex to display the fossil list, try looking at smaller subregions.

Other Databases

Wikipedia:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skipton,_Victoria
Wikidata ID:Q7535842
GeoNames ID:2149361

Localities in this Region

Other Regions, Features and Areas that Intersect

Australia
Australian PlateTectonic Plate

This page contains all mineral locality references listed on mindat.org. This does not claim to be a complete list. If you know of more minerals from this site, please register so you can add to our database. This locality information is for reference purposes only. You should never attempt to visit any sites listed in mindat.org without first ensuring that you have the permission of the land and/or mineral rights holders for access and that you are aware of all safety precautions necessary.
 
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