When I worked in a glass bottle making factory, we would bring in scrap glass of all colors.
Of course, other than for amber or champagne green, we had to separate all of the colors and blend the scrap glass accordingly.
When we ran Champagne Green, many of the bottles came in full, with labels, wire and lead wrapping intact. This happened a couple of times per year, for all sorts of reasons, such as the government banning imports from recently designated nations. One of them was South Africa, during Aparthied.
We had to be careful when walking under the melting furnace floor, while doing inspections. Those furnaces were heated to 1750F to melt such dark glass. The lead foil would melt, sink through the molten glass to the floor of the furnace and in such a high heat the viscosity of that lead was similar to penetrating oil
The glass would just solidify as soon as the ambient air hit it, but the lead would just keep on flowing. A fellow could get a super nasty burn from those falling drops of lead, especially if it hit the top of his "plastic" helmet.
I used to put metal pots on the floor, where the leaks usually occured and collected the lead. I would get 20-30Kg every six or so months.
That lead was fantastic stuff. Absolutely pure, shiney and dead soft. Ideal for round balls, requiring patches.
Even at those temps, there weren't any impurities in that lead and it was very shiney, without any discoloration, which is seen in the pics above.
I agree with the other comments. If you are getting granular bits, it's definitely impurities, such as dirt or even zinc.