The discovery was announced, by a man mentioned in Comptes rendus only as del Rio,[8] in the journal of the Mexico City School of Mining. The news spread through the reading that journal and direct letters of del Rio. In the subsequent years, the discovery was mentioned several times.
One of the earliest notes of the discovery is a translation of a letter of del Rio to Freiesleben.[citation needed]
In 1839, it was described as lemon coloured spots in the sandstone of Casas Viejas.[9] This description was also given in a Spanish book printed in 1844.[10] In 1836, the communication of Yniestra to Arago about a discovery made by del Rio was published in Comptes rendus as a short paper. This publication recounts that a mineral sample was deposited at the school of mines by a Mr. Jose Casas Viejas from the Querétaro province, and that the mineral had a red-brown color.[8] In 1861, the book A Glossary of Mineralogy by Henry William Bristow stated that it had been found in Casas Viejas in Mexico as reddish brown particles on mercury selenide.[11] Shortly after, in 1862, a book about chemical technology named the Mexican region of Casas Viejas as the only location where the mineral was found.[12]
^Witzke, T. (1997). "New data on the mercury iodide mineral coccinite, HgI2". Neues Jahrbuch für Mineralogie - Monatshefte. 1997 (11): 505–510. doi:10.1127/njmm/1997/1997/505.
^ abJambor, John; Pertsev, Nicolai; Roberts, Andrew (1998). "New Mineral Names"(PDF). American Mineralogist. 83: 907–910.