Commemorative stamp series - Germany / German Democratic Republic 1972 - 10 Pfennig


Theme: Geology & Geography
CountryGermany / German Democratic Republic
Issue Date1972
Face Value10.00 
Colorbrown
PerforationK 13
Printing TypePhotogravure
Stamp TypePostage stamp
Item TypeStamp
Chronological Issue Number1480
Chronological ChapterGER-DDR
SID687504
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Mineral finds from the GDR The Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications of the German Democratic Republic publishes six multicolored special postage stamps on which mineral finds from the GDR are depicted. Mineral finds from the GDR In 1969, a series of stamps with minerals, whose motives came from the collections of the Geosciences section of the Bergakademie Freiberg. With the minerals selected at that time, only a few well-known mineral deposits could be detected in the German Democratic Republic. The new emission offers the opportunity to showcase further minerals from localities with already extinct mining and still operating mines. The minerals for the deposits in our republic are so typical that some were named after their localities (Zinnwaldit = Zinnwald). The crystal stages shown are in their training and visual impact of considerable quality and therefore almost all exhibited in the show collection of Bergakademie Freiberg. More than 62,000 mineral samples have been collected in the collections over the course of more than 2010 years, giving a comprehensive picture of the history of mining, especially the Ore Mountains and Vogtland and the Harz. This fund is an excellent tool for science in teaching and research, and also shows interested circles which colorful and well-crystallized minerals are found in our homeland. 10-pfennig value Zinnwaldite on smoky quartz from Zinnwald in the Erzgebirge Due to its lithium content, Zinnwaldite is also called Lithionglimmer. The six-sided, shiny leaflets have grown together in packages that occur in the corridors of the granite deposit of the tin deposit in the Erzgebirge with quartz. Both minerals are mostly encrusted with hematite, which also gives them the intense red to brownish color. The platelet-shaped formation of the crystals, which is typical of the entire family of mica minerals, allows the Zinnwalditpakete easily split. With these few examples of minerals from our republic, the abundance of minerals found in our homeland is far from exhausted, but can only be considered an indication of the richness and beauty of nature as offered in the mineralogical collection in Freiberg ,

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Mineral finds from the GDR The Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications of the German Democratic Republic publishes six multicolored special postage stamps on which mineral finds from the GDR are depicted. Mineral finds from the GDR In 1969, a series of stamps with minerals, whose motives came from the collections of the Geosciences section of the Bergakademie Freiberg. With the minerals selected at that time, only a few well-known mineral deposits could be detected in the German Democratic Republic. The new emission offers the opportunity to showcase further minerals from localities with already extinct mining and still operating mines. The minerals for the deposits in our republic are so typical that some were named after their localities (Zinnwaldit = Zinnwald). The crystal stages shown are in their training and visual impact of considerable quality and therefore almost all exhibited in the show collection of Bergakademie Freiberg. More than 62,000 mineral samples have been collected in the collections over the course of more than 2010 years, giving a comprehensive picture of the history of mining, especially the Ore Mountains and Vogtland and the Harz. This fund is an excellent tool for science in teaching and research, and also shows interested circles which colorful and well-crystallized minerals are found in our homeland. 10-pfennig value Zinnwaldite on smoky quartz from Zinnwald in the Erzgebirge Due to its lithium content, Zinnwaldite is also called Lithionglimmer. The six-sided, shiny leaflets have grown together in packages that occur in the corridors of the granite deposit of the tin deposit in the Erzgebirge with quartz. Both minerals are mostly encrusted with hematite, which also gives them the intense red to brownish color. The platelet-shaped formation of the crystals, which is typical of the entire family of mica minerals, allows the Zinnwalditpakete easily split. With these few examples of minerals from our republic, the abundance of minerals found in our homeland is far from exhausted, but can only be considered an indication of the richness and beauty of nature as offered in the mineralogical collection in Freiberg ,.