Artigo Revisado por pares

Gobbinsite, a new zeolite mineral from Co. Antrim, N. Ireland

1982; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 46; Issue: 340 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1180/minmag.1982.046.340.12

ISSN

1471-8022

Autores

Rab Nawaz, John F. Malone,

Tópico(s)

Radioactive element chemistry and processing

Resumo

Abstract A chalky white, fibrous mineral, in the amygdales of Tertiary basalts from the Gobbins area, Co. Antrim, has been discovered to be a new mineral. It consists of fibrous dusters of lath-shaped crystals showing straight extinction with negative elongation. Its refractive index is ɛ 1.489, ω 1.494 (both ± 0.003) and specific gravity is 2.194 (meas.), 2.147 (calc.). The mineral is tetragonal with ɛ = c (elongation); a = 10.145, c = 9.788 Å. The strongest powder lines (in Å, intensity in brackets) are: 7.10, 4.10, 3.19(100); 3.10, 2.69(80); 5.07(50); 2.64(40). A spectrographic analysis shows major Si, Al, minor Ca, Na, Cu, and trace Fe. Two chemical and one probe analysis give the ideal formula Na 4 (Ca,Mg,K 2 )Al 6 Si 10 O 32 .12H 2 O. The name gobbinsite (approved by the IMA Commission on New Mineral Names) is suggested after the locality. The type specimen (I7881) is preserved in the Ulster Museum. Rotation and Weissenberg photographs of gobbinsite and garronite show doubled reflections, which are explained on the basis of submicroscopic twinning on (101). Relationship between gobbinsite and garronite is discussed and evidence is presented for the occurrence of minute amounts of a merlinoite-type mineral that forms regular intergrowths with gobbinsite and garronite.

Referência(s)
Altmetric
PlumX