Tsumcorite is a rare hydrated leadarsenate mineral that was discovered in 1971, and reported by Geier, Kautz and Muller.[6] It was named after the TSUMeb CORporation mine at Tsumeb, in Namibia, in recognition of the Corporation's support for mineralogical investigations of the orebody at its Mineral Research Laboratory.[5]
Unit cell
Tsumcorite belongs to the monoclinic crystal class 2/m, which means that it has a twofold axis of symmetry along the b axis and a mirror plane perpendicular to this, in the plane containing the a and c axes. The a and c axes are inclined to each other at angle β = 115.3°. The unit cell parameters are a = 9.124 Å to 9.131 Å, b = 6.326 Å to 6.329 Å and c = 7.577 Å to 7.583 Å.[2][3][4][6] There are two formula units per unit cell (Z = 2), and the space group is C2/m, meaning that the cell is a C-face centred lattice, with lattice points in the center of the C face as well as at the corners of the cell.[8] The structure is related to the brackebushite group structure.[2]
Mineral series
Tsumcorite belongs to the helmutwinklerite group,[2] whose members are
Tsumcorite forms a series with helmutwinklerite as Zn replaces the Fe2+, with thometzekite as Cu replaces the Zn and Fe2+,[2][4] and also with mawbyite.[9]
Crystal habit and properties
Crystals are prismatic, elongated along the b axis, or wedge-shaped. They occur in radiating sheaves and spherulites, and as fibrous crusts or earthy and powdery material.[5]Cleavage is good perpendicular to the c axis,[5] and twinning is common.[5]
Tsumcorite is yellow-brown, red-brown or orange in color, and it is one of the few minerals that have a yellow streak (orpiment and crocoite are two others). It is translucent, with a vitreous luster, and dichroic yellow to yellow-green.[2][6] The optical class is biaxial and the refractive indices are approximately equal to 1.90.[2][4][6]
^ abcdefgFleischer M (1972) New mineral names, American Mineralogist 57, 1558, being a summary of Geier, Kautz and Muller (1971) Neues Jahrbuch für Mineralogie (Monatshefte) 1971: 304–309
^Tillmanns, E.; Gebert, W. (1 December 1973). "The crystal structure of tsumcorite, a new mineral from the Tsumeb mine, S. W. Africa". Acta Crystallographica Section B: Structural Crystallography and Crystal Chemistry. 29 (12): 2789–2794. doi:10.1107/S0567740873007545.
^Crystallography (1993) Walter Borchardt-Ott, Springer Verlag
^ abAustralian Journal of Mineralogy (1997) 3-1:62