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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter March 31, 2015

Hydroxylellestadite from Cioclovina Cave (Romania): Microanalytical, structural, and vibrational spectroscopy data

  • Bogdan P. Onac EMAIL logo , Herta Effenberger , Karl Ettinger and Simona Cinta Panzaru
From the journal American Mineralogist

Abstract

Electron-microprobe analyses of hydroxylellestadite from the Cioclovina Cave (Romania) gave the composition Ca10.27[(SiO4)2.53(SO4)2.17(PO4)1.27]Σ=5.97[(OH)1.66F0.21Cl0.16]Σ=2.03. The mineral is translucent to transparent, light orange, slightly fluorescent, has a vitreous luster and <1.5 mm in length. A singlecrystal X-ray structure investigation gave the average space-group symmetry P63/m [R1(F) = 0.038 for 783 reflections up to 2θMoKα = 70° and 42 variables, a = 9.496(2), c = 6.920(2) Å, V = 540.4 Å3, and Z = 2]. Some atoms exhibit large anisotropic displacements. Ordering of atoms along with a symmetry reduction is not verified. Fourier-transformed infrared (FT-IR) and micro-Raman spectra exhibit a distinct contribution from (PO4)3- modes along with the characteristic (SO4)2- and (SiO4)4- modes. The occurrence is quite unusual and suggests that an intense thermal process affected a restricted area within the cave. Hydroxylellestadite is associated with berlinite, another high-temperature mineral. It is likely to have formed within highly phosphatized, silicate-rich, carbonate-mudstone sediments heavily compacted and thermally transformed due to in situ bat guano combustion.

Received: 2005-11-9
Accepted: 2006-4-27
Published Online: 2015-3-31
Published in Print: 2006-11-1

© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

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