Auerbakhite, MnTl2As2S5, a new thallium sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, Russia

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Auerbakhite, MnTl2As2S5, a new thallium sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, Russia. / Kasatkin, Anatoly; Plasil, Jakub; Makovicky, Emil; Chukanov, Nikita; Skoda, Radek; Agakhanov, Atali A.; Stepanov, Sergey Y.; Palamarchuk, Roman S.

I: Journal of Geosciences, Bind 66, Nr. 2, 2021, s. 89-96.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kasatkin, A, Plasil, J, Makovicky, E, Chukanov, N, Skoda, R, Agakhanov, AA, Stepanov, SY & Palamarchuk, RS 2021, 'Auerbakhite, MnTl2As2S5, a new thallium sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, Russia', Journal of Geosciences, bind 66, nr. 2, s. 89-96. https://doi.org/10.3190/jgeosci.321

APA

Kasatkin, A., Plasil, J., Makovicky, E., Chukanov, N., Skoda, R., Agakhanov, A. A., Stepanov, S. Y., & Palamarchuk, R. S. (2021). Auerbakhite, MnTl2As2S5, a new thallium sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, Russia. Journal of Geosciences, 66(2), 89-96. https://doi.org/10.3190/jgeosci.321

Vancouver

Kasatkin A, Plasil J, Makovicky E, Chukanov N, Skoda R, Agakhanov AA o.a. Auerbakhite, MnTl2As2S5, a new thallium sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, Russia. Journal of Geosciences. 2021;66(2):89-96. https://doi.org/10.3190/jgeosci.321

Author

Kasatkin, Anatoly ; Plasil, Jakub ; Makovicky, Emil ; Chukanov, Nikita ; Skoda, Radek ; Agakhanov, Atali A. ; Stepanov, Sergey Y. ; Palamarchuk, Roman S. / Auerbakhite, MnTl2As2S5, a new thallium sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, Russia. I: Journal of Geosciences. 2021 ; Bind 66, Nr. 2. s. 89-96.

Bibtex

@article{998ae6e299024d10aa98519e34464f87,
title = "Auerbakhite, MnTl2As2S5, a new thallium sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, Russia",
abstract = "Auerbakhite (IMA 2020-047), MnTl2As2S5, is a new sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Sverdlovsk Oblast', Northern Urals, Russia. The new mineral occurs in limestone breccias composed of calcite, dolomite, baryte, clinochlore, fluorapatite and quartz, and cemented by major realgar, orpiment and pyrite. Other minerals directly associating with auerbakhite include alabandite, bernardite, christite, cinnabar, coloradoite, dalnegroite, gillulyite, gold, hutchinsonite, imhofite, lorandite, metacinnabar, philrothite, rebulite, routhierite, sphalerite, and vrbaite. Auerbakhite forms rare and very small short-prismatic crystals and irregular grains which do not exceed 15 x 5 mu m. It is transparent, has a bright red color and adamantine luster. Auerbakhite is brittle, with an uneven fracture. Cleavage is not observed. The calculated density is 5.245 g/cm(3). In reflected light, auerbakhite is light gray, weakly bireflectant. In crossed polars, it is distinctly anisotropic, in light gray and brown tones, with abundant bright red internal reflections. The empirical formula of auerbakhite is Mn1.04Tl1.97Pb0.02As1.95S5.02 (based on 10 atoms pfu). Prominent features in the Raman spectrum include bands of Mn-S and As-S stretching vibrations and numerous low-frequency bands related to mixed soft modes involving bending and Tl-S stretching vibrations. Auerbakhite is orthorhombic, space group Cmce, a = 15.3280(15) angstrom, b = 7.662(7)angstrom, c = 16.6330(14)angstrom, V = 1953.40(18)angstrom(3) and Z = 8. The crystal structure of auerbakhite was refined from the single-crystal X-ray diffraction data to R = 0.0723 for 307 observed reflections with I-obs > 3 sigma(I). Auerbakhite is isostructural to the synthetic phase Tl2MnAs2S5. Its crystal structure consists of complex (001) layers based on a set of MnS4 columns parallel to [010] and are composed of edge-sharing slightly irregular MnS6 octahedra. The columns are connected via Tl1 and are framed by paired AsS3 pyramids with lone electron pairs oriented into interlayer space. Highly irregular Tl(2)S-6 coordination polyhedra are situated in interlayers and share ligands with the layers. The new mineral honors Russian mining engineer, manufacturer and mineralogist Alexander Andreevitch Auerbakh whose activities were closely related to Northern Urals.",
keywords = "auerbakhite, new sulfosalt, thallium, crystal structure, Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, CRYSTAL-STRUCTURES, PROGRAM, SPECTRA, REALGAR, TL",
author = "Anatoly Kasatkin and Jakub Plasil and Emil Makovicky and Nikita Chukanov and Radek Skoda and Agakhanov, {Atali A.} and Stepanov, {Sergey Y.} and Palamarchuk, {Roman S.}",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.3190/jgeosci.321",
language = "English",
volume = "66",
pages = "89--96",
journal = "Journal of Geosciences (Czech Republic)",
issn = "1802-6222",
publisher = "Czech Geological Survey",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Auerbakhite, MnTl2As2S5, a new thallium sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, Russia

AU - Kasatkin, Anatoly

AU - Plasil, Jakub

AU - Makovicky, Emil

AU - Chukanov, Nikita

AU - Skoda, Radek

AU - Agakhanov, Atali A.

AU - Stepanov, Sergey Y.

AU - Palamarchuk, Roman S.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Auerbakhite (IMA 2020-047), MnTl2As2S5, is a new sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Sverdlovsk Oblast', Northern Urals, Russia. The new mineral occurs in limestone breccias composed of calcite, dolomite, baryte, clinochlore, fluorapatite and quartz, and cemented by major realgar, orpiment and pyrite. Other minerals directly associating with auerbakhite include alabandite, bernardite, christite, cinnabar, coloradoite, dalnegroite, gillulyite, gold, hutchinsonite, imhofite, lorandite, metacinnabar, philrothite, rebulite, routhierite, sphalerite, and vrbaite. Auerbakhite forms rare and very small short-prismatic crystals and irregular grains which do not exceed 15 x 5 mu m. It is transparent, has a bright red color and adamantine luster. Auerbakhite is brittle, with an uneven fracture. Cleavage is not observed. The calculated density is 5.245 g/cm(3). In reflected light, auerbakhite is light gray, weakly bireflectant. In crossed polars, it is distinctly anisotropic, in light gray and brown tones, with abundant bright red internal reflections. The empirical formula of auerbakhite is Mn1.04Tl1.97Pb0.02As1.95S5.02 (based on 10 atoms pfu). Prominent features in the Raman spectrum include bands of Mn-S and As-S stretching vibrations and numerous low-frequency bands related to mixed soft modes involving bending and Tl-S stretching vibrations. Auerbakhite is orthorhombic, space group Cmce, a = 15.3280(15) angstrom, b = 7.662(7)angstrom, c = 16.6330(14)angstrom, V = 1953.40(18)angstrom(3) and Z = 8. The crystal structure of auerbakhite was refined from the single-crystal X-ray diffraction data to R = 0.0723 for 307 observed reflections with I-obs > 3 sigma(I). Auerbakhite is isostructural to the synthetic phase Tl2MnAs2S5. Its crystal structure consists of complex (001) layers based on a set of MnS4 columns parallel to [010] and are composed of edge-sharing slightly irregular MnS6 octahedra. The columns are connected via Tl1 and are framed by paired AsS3 pyramids with lone electron pairs oriented into interlayer space. Highly irregular Tl(2)S-6 coordination polyhedra are situated in interlayers and share ligands with the layers. The new mineral honors Russian mining engineer, manufacturer and mineralogist Alexander Andreevitch Auerbakh whose activities were closely related to Northern Urals.

AB - Auerbakhite (IMA 2020-047), MnTl2As2S5, is a new sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Sverdlovsk Oblast', Northern Urals, Russia. The new mineral occurs in limestone breccias composed of calcite, dolomite, baryte, clinochlore, fluorapatite and quartz, and cemented by major realgar, orpiment and pyrite. Other minerals directly associating with auerbakhite include alabandite, bernardite, christite, cinnabar, coloradoite, dalnegroite, gillulyite, gold, hutchinsonite, imhofite, lorandite, metacinnabar, philrothite, rebulite, routhierite, sphalerite, and vrbaite. Auerbakhite forms rare and very small short-prismatic crystals and irregular grains which do not exceed 15 x 5 mu m. It is transparent, has a bright red color and adamantine luster. Auerbakhite is brittle, with an uneven fracture. Cleavage is not observed. The calculated density is 5.245 g/cm(3). In reflected light, auerbakhite is light gray, weakly bireflectant. In crossed polars, it is distinctly anisotropic, in light gray and brown tones, with abundant bright red internal reflections. The empirical formula of auerbakhite is Mn1.04Tl1.97Pb0.02As1.95S5.02 (based on 10 atoms pfu). Prominent features in the Raman spectrum include bands of Mn-S and As-S stretching vibrations and numerous low-frequency bands related to mixed soft modes involving bending and Tl-S stretching vibrations. Auerbakhite is orthorhombic, space group Cmce, a = 15.3280(15) angstrom, b = 7.662(7)angstrom, c = 16.6330(14)angstrom, V = 1953.40(18)angstrom(3) and Z = 8. The crystal structure of auerbakhite was refined from the single-crystal X-ray diffraction data to R = 0.0723 for 307 observed reflections with I-obs > 3 sigma(I). Auerbakhite is isostructural to the synthetic phase Tl2MnAs2S5. Its crystal structure consists of complex (001) layers based on a set of MnS4 columns parallel to [010] and are composed of edge-sharing slightly irregular MnS6 octahedra. The columns are connected via Tl1 and are framed by paired AsS3 pyramids with lone electron pairs oriented into interlayer space. Highly irregular Tl(2)S-6 coordination polyhedra are situated in interlayers and share ligands with the layers. The new mineral honors Russian mining engineer, manufacturer and mineralogist Alexander Andreevitch Auerbakh whose activities were closely related to Northern Urals.

KW - auerbakhite

KW - new sulfosalt

KW - thallium

KW - crystal structure

KW - Vorontsovskoe gold deposit

KW - Northern Urals

KW - CRYSTAL-STRUCTURES

KW - PROGRAM

KW - SPECTRA

KW - REALGAR

KW - TL

U2 - 10.3190/jgeosci.321

DO - 10.3190/jgeosci.321

M3 - Journal article

VL - 66

SP - 89

EP - 96

JO - Journal of Geosciences (Czech Republic)

JF - Journal of Geosciences (Czech Republic)

SN - 1802-6222

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 279118982