Paleoproterozoic Banded Iron from Michigan
"The Rusting of the Earth"

Name: Banded Iron (hand polished)

Age: Middle Paleoproterozoic (2.0 to 2.2 billion years old)

Size: mm (25.4mm=1 inch): 7.4 by 3.9 inches

Location: Marquette Iron Rage, near Ispeming, Michigan (above the Kona Dolomite)

Code: DS412

Price: Sold


This banded iron is metasediment (sediment that has undergone metamorphism) and has a high content of magnetite (Fe3O4), a natural magnet, and yielding the midnight black coloration; minute crystalline forms of other mineral-based compounds are also present. Whether the sediment was of bioorganic origin (stromatolite) is indeterminable, but likely.

The specimen has been hand-polished to a glassine finish on one side with fine carbide and diamond abrasive, a very labor-intensive job. The picture comparing front and back reveals the value of this form of polishing.

The polished side's reflected colors highly depends on the angle of reflected light. Depending on angle, colors vary from black to gray and red to solver. This is a very pretty example of banded iron that encodes a defining event in geological history and evolution, i.e., the rusting of the earth due to bacterial produced oxygen and also led to the creation of atmospheric oxygen. At the time this banded iron was formed, the earth had been rusting for about 1,500 million years, and about another 500 million years would be required before the process exhausted the marine iron supply.

Stone Relic Purchase Information

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