Chemistry:Tugarinovite
From HandWiki
Short description: Oxide mineral
| Tugarinovite | |
|---|---|
Tugarinovite | |
| General | |
| Category | Oxide mineral |
| Formula (repeating unit) | MoO2 |
| Strunz classification | 4.DB.05 |
| Crystal system | Monoclinic |
| Crystal class | Prismatic H-M symbol (2/m) |
| Space group | P21/c (no. 14) |
| Unit cell | a = 5.6 Å, b = 4.85 Å, c = 5.53 Å; β = 119.37° |
| Identification | |
| Color | Dark lilac-brown |
| Crystal habit | Crystals are tabular striated prisms |
| Twinning | Polysynthetic |
| Mohs scale hardness | 4.6 |
| |re|er}} | Greasy to metallic |
| Streak | Greenish gray |
| Diaphaneity | Semitransparent |
| Specific gravity | 6.58 (calculated) |
| Optical properties | Biaxial |
| Pleochroism | Light gray to dark pink; pale yellow to bluish olive-brown in reflected light |
| References | [1][2][3] |
Tugarinovite is a rare molybdenum oxide mineral with formula MoO2. It occurs as a primary mineral phase associated with metasomatism in a sulfur deficient reducing environment. In the type locality it occurs with uraninite, molybdenite, galena, zircon and wulfenite.[1]
Tugarinovite was first described for an occurrence in the Lenskoye molybdenum–uranium deposit in the Amurskaya Oblast, Far-Eastern Region, Russia . It was named for geochemist Ivan Alekseevich Tugarinov of the Vernadskii Institute in Moscow.[1][2] In addition to its type locality in Russia it has been reported from the Allende meteorite in Chihuahua, Mexico, the Nansei Archipelago of Japan and Bohemia in the Czech Republic.[2]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Handbook of Mineralogy
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Tugarinovite on Mindat.org
- ↑ Tugarinovite on Webmin
- ↑ Warr, L.N. (2021). "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols". Mineralogical Magazine 85 (3): 291–320. doi:10.1180/mgm.2021.43. Bibcode: 2021MinM...85..291W.
