Chemistry:Tugarinovite

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Short description: Oxide mineral
Tugarinovite
Tugarinovite.jpg
Tugarinovite
General
CategoryOxide mineral
Formula
(repeating unit)
MoO2
Strunz classification4.DB.05
Crystal systemMonoclinic
Crystal classPrismatic H-M symbol (2/m)
Space groupP21/c (no. 14)
Unit cella = 5.6 Å, b = 4.85 Å, c = 5.53 Å; β = 119.37°
Identification
ColorDark lilac-brown
Crystal habitCrystals are tabular striated prisms
TwinningPolysynthetic
Mohs scale hardness4.6
|re|er}}Greasy to metallic
StreakGreenish gray
DiaphaneitySemitransparent
Specific gravity6.58 (calculated)
Optical propertiesBiaxial
PleochroismLight 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. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Handbook of Mineralogy
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Tugarinovite on Mindat.org
  3. Tugarinovite on Webmin
  4. Warr, L.N. (2021). "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols". Mineralogical Magazine 85 (3): 291–320. doi:10.1180/mgm.2021.43. Bibcode2021MinM...85..291W.