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This rare specimen of stibnite has an ancient handwritten label attached indicating the San Pancracio mine in Ceuta. Searching for information about this mine we have found in MTI details of the work: “Síntesis geológica de Ceuta” by Simón Chamorro and Mercedes Nieto (1989) about this town. We reproduce here some of the details indicated in their work: "Next to Arroyo de las Bombas and near Fort Piniers, there is a deposit of antimonite (stibnite), known by the name of San Pancracio. The mineralization is associated with the contact between the warped limestones and the Carboniferous shales and sandstones; both types of rocks appear mineralized, although in the latter with more intensity the main control of the deposit is defined by a fault and a system of associated fractures from directions N 10º E to N 25º. E. [...] It was exploited by Fundiciones de Antimonio S.A. of Barcelona, from 1960 until March 1979, the year in which it was abandoned due to depletion of the main mineralized masses. Its production has been very small, a maximum of 135 t. in 1970, and an average grade of 45% [...] It presents a paragenesis of stibnite-quartz and carbonates, with traces of chalcostibine, galena, pyrite, chalcopyrite, chalcosine, covelline, brandsite and gold. Simón Chamorro Moreno, Mercedes Nieto García (1989): Síntesis geológica de Ceuta. Ceuta. ISBN: 84-87148-07-9.