Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T11:15:10.696Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Juabite, Cu5(Te6+O4)2(As5+O4)2.3H2O. a new mineral species from the Centennial Eureka mine, Juab County, Utah

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2018

Andrew C. Roberts
Affiliation:
Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0E8
Robert A. Gault
Affiliation:
Research Division, Canadian Museum of Nature, P.O. Box 3443, Station “D”, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada KIP 6P4
Martin C. Jensen
Affiliation:
121-2855 Idlewild Drive, Reno, Nevada, U.S.A. 89509
Alan J. Criddle
Affiliation:
Department of Mineralogy, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK
Elizabeth A. Moffatx
Affiliation:
Canadian Conservation Institute, 1030 Innes Road, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0M5

Abstract

Juabite, ideally Cu5(Te6+O4)2(As5+O4)2·3H2O, is triclinic, space-group choices P1(1) or P(2), with unit-cell parameters refined from powder data: a = 8.984(5), b = 10.079(7), c = 8.975(5) Å, α = 102.68(7)°, β = 92.45(6)°, γ = 70.45(5)° V = 746.8(8) Å3, a:b:c = 0.8914:1:0.8905, Z = 2. The strongest seven reflections of the X-ray powder-diffraction pattern [d in Å (I)(hkl)] are: 9.28 (70)(010), 4.65 (70)(020), 3.097 (100)(030,11), 3.018 (60)(212), 2.658 (50)(01), 2.468 (50)(2) and 1.740 (50)(1, 521, 5). The mineral is an extremely rare constituent on the dumps of the Centennial Eureka mine, Juab County, Utah, U.S.A., where it occurs as crystalline platy masses that average 0.2–0.3 mm in longest dimension within small interconnected vugs of drusy quartz. Associated minerals are enargite, beudantite, and an undefined, possible Pb-analogue of arsenobismite. Individual crystals are subhedral to euhedral and average 125 × 100 × 1–2 µm in size. Cleavage {010} perfect. Forms are: {010} major; {100}, {01}, and {101} minor. The mineral is translucent (masses) to transparent (crystals), emerald-green, with a pale green streak, and an uneven to subconchoidal fracture. Juabite is vitreous to adamantine (almost gemmy) on cleavage faces, brittle, and nonfluorescent; H (Mohs) 3–4; D (calc.) 4.59 g/cm3 for the idealised formula. In polished section, juabite is white in plane-polarised reflected light in air with ubiquitous turquoise-blue internal reflections; bireflectance and anisotropy are unknown (due to interference from internal reflections). Averaged electronmicroprobe analyses yielded CuO 38.25, PbO 0.57, TeO3 32.58, As2O5 22.81, H2O (calc. assuming 3H2O) [5.19], total [99.40] wt.%, leading to the empirical formula (Cu5.01Pb0.03)Σ5.04(TeO4)l.93(AsO4)2.07·3.00H2O based on O = 19. The infrared absorption spectrum shows definite bands for structural H2O with an O-H stretching frequency centred at 3283 cm−1 and a H-O-H flexing frequency centred at 1642 cm−1. The mineral name is for the county within the state of Utah in which the Centennial Eureka mine is located.

Type
Mineralogy
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Grice, J.D. and Roberts, A.C. (1995) Frankhawthorneite, a unique HCP framework structure of a cupric tellurate. Can. Mineral., 33, 649-53.Google Scholar
Grice, J.D., Groat, L.A. and Roberts, A.C. (1996) Jensenite, a cupric tellurate framework structure with two coordinations of copper. Can. Mineral., 34, 55-9.Google Scholar
Marty, J., Jensen, M.C. and Roberts, A.C. (1993) Minerals of the Centennial Eureka mine, Tintic District, Eureka, Utah. Rocks & Minerals, 68, 406-16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, A.C., Ercit, T.S., Criddle, A.J., Jones, G.C., Williams, R.S., Cureton, F.E. II and Jensen, M.C. (1994) Mcalpineite, Cu3TeO6.H2O, a new mineral from the McAlpine mine, Tuolumne County, California and from the Centennial Eureka mine, Juab County, Utah. Mineral. Mag., 58, 417-24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, A.C., Grice, J.D., Criddle, A.J., Jensen, M.C., Harris, D.C. and Moffatt, E.A. (1995) Frankhawthorneite, Cu2Te6+O4(OH)2, a new mineral species from the Centennial Eureka mine, Tintic District, Juab County, Utah. Can. Mineral., 33, 641-7.Google Scholar
Roberts, A.C., Grice, J.D., Groat, L.A., Criddle, A.J., Gault, R.A., Erd, R.C. and Moffatt, E.A. (1996a) Jensenite, Cu3Te6+O6-2H2O, a new mineral species from the Centennial Eureka mine, Tintic District, Juab County, Utah. Can. Mineral., 34, 4954.Google Scholar
Roberts, A.C., Groat, L.A., Grice, J.D., Gault, R.A., Jensen, M.C., Moffatt, E.A. and Stirling, J.A.R. (1996b) Leisingite, Cu(Mg,Cu,Fe,Zn)2Te6+O6-6H2O, a new mineral species from the Centennial Eureka mine, Juab County, Utah. Mineral. Mag., 60; 653-7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, A.C., Stirling, J.A.R., Criddle, A.J., Jensen, M.C. and Moffatt, E.A. (1997) Utahite, Cu5Zn3(Te6+O4)4(OH)8.7H2O, a new mineral from the Centennial Eureka mine, Tintic district, Juab County, Utah. Mineral. Rec., 28, (in press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar