Few years ago, we were a small team carrying out a regional geological mapping campaign in the South of New Caledonia. On the rocky ridges surrounding the ferricrete plateaus of the Prony Bay, we mapped dunite and harzburgite with varying degrees of serpentinization, as well as gabbros dykes.
That day, on the steep slopes of Pic du Champ de Bataille, I came across a small dunite and pyroxenite outcrop with nice chromite. Nothing very surprising in the Massif du Sud, where podiform chromite occurrences abound with truly diverse facies and textures. But at the first geopick blow I realized that this chromite was remarkable because of its euhedral crystals, relatively rare for this spinel. In this sample octahedron crystals are floating within large pyroxene crystals with a poikilitic texture.
In New Caledonia, chromite was mined with varying degrees of success as early as 1880. In the early 20th century the island was even the 3rd world producer thanks to the Tiébaghi deposit at the other end of the Grande Terre (but that will be another story).




