Leifite is a rare tectosilicate. Tectosilicates are built on a framework of tetrahedra with silicon or aluminium at the centre and oxygen at the vertices; they include feldspars and zeolites, but leifite does not belong in either of these categories. It is a member of the leifite group, which includes telyushenkoite(Cs,Na,K)Na6(Be2Al3Si15O39) and eirikiteKNa6Be2(Si15Al3)O39F2).[5] Leifite was discovered in 1915, and named after Leif Ericson who was a Norse explorer who lived around 1000 AD, and was probably the first European to land in North America, nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus.[5] Eirikite was named in 2007 after Eirik Raude, or Erik the Red, (950–1003), who discovered Greenland and who was the father of Leif Ericson. The third mineral in the group, telyushenkoite, was discovered in 2001. It was not named after any of Leif Ericson's family members, but after a professor of geology in Turkmenistan.
Structure
Leifite is a trigonal mineral, class 3 2/m, space group P3m1.[8] There are 3 formula units in the unit cell (Z = 3), and cell dimensions are 14.4 Å in the a direction and 4.9 Å in the c direction.[6][9] It contains OH groups, but no water of crystallization as was previously assumed.[10]Tetrahedrons of silicon or aluminium atoms surrounded by four oxygen atoms link to form six-membered rings stacked along the c direction to form channels, similar to those in zeolites.[8]
Appearance
Leifite is generally white or colourless, with a white streak and a silky or vitreous lustre. It occurs as fine needles making up radiating aggregates and rosettes. Individual crystals are deeply striated hexagonalprisms that are transparent to translucent.[10]
Physical Properties
The mineral is hard, with Mohs hardness 6, the same as that of feldspar, and specific gravity 2.6,[10] again like the feldspars. It is brittle, with an uneven to splintery fracture.[5][1]
^ abcdeAnthony, John W.; Bideaux, Richard A.; Bladh, Kenneth W.; Nichols, Monte C. (2005). "Leifite"(PDF). Handbook of Mineralogy. Mineral Data Publishing. Retrieved 14 March 2022.