Stiblite
Stiblite, stibilite, stibiolite (German: Stiblith from Latin: Stibium + Ancient Greek: λίθος, stone), also stibiconise or antimony ochre (Spiessglanzocker, Stibiconise) — an obsolete, formerly widely used mineralogical name for one of the best known and most widespread antimony ochres. Established in 1847 (by Johann Blum and Delfs) a decade and a half after stibiconite, stiblite was known in the 19th century as a secondary antimony mineral of the ″hydrous oxide″ class, it was an amorphous, pale yellowish precipitate found in association with blaenierite (bindheimite) and jamesonite, and was particularly found at Trevinnick Mine, near Endellion, Cornwall.