Abstract

Abstract. Tancaite-(Ce), ideally FeCe(MoO4)3⚫3H2O, is a new mineral occurring within cavities in the quartz veins which cut the granite at Su Seinargiu, Sarroch (CA), Sardinia, Italy. It is a secondary mineral formed in the oxidation zone of a sulfide ore vein. Associated minerals are quartz, muscovite, molybdenite, pyrite, and a mendozavilite-like phase. Tancaite-(Ce) is red or pale brown in colour, with a vitreous to adamantine lustre. Electron microprobe analyses give (wt %) SiO2 0.34, CaO 0.09, Fe2O3 11.29, SrO 0.02, La2O3 5.04, Ce2O3 10.35, Pr2O3 1.07, Nd2O3 3.66, Sm2O3 0.19, ThO2 2.58, UO2 0.17, MoO3 58.62, and H2O (calculated) 7.43, with a sum of 100.85, from which the empirical formula is calculated. The empirical formula Fe1.033+(Ce0.46La0.23Nd0.16Pr0.05Sm0.01U0.01Th0.07)Σ=0.99(Mo2.96Si0.04)Σ=3.00O12⚫3H2O can be simplified as Fe3+(REE)(MoO4)3⚫3H2O and idealized as FeCe(MoO4)3⚫3H2O. The presence of H2O was confirmed by micro-Raman spectrometry (stretching and bending vibrations of O–H). The calculated density is 3.834 g cm−3. The X-ray diffraction pattern of tancaite-(Ce) is characterized by a set of strong reflections, which point to a cubic subcell with a=6.870(1) Å and space group Pm3¯m, plus a set of superstructure reflections. Tancaite-(Ce) displays a new structure type not previously reported in natural and synthetic molybdates. By considering only the strong reflections, it was possible to solve and refine its average structure (R1=0.038 for 192 unique reflections with I>2σ(I)). The crystal structure consists of FeO6 octahedra centred at the origin of the cubic subcell and linked together through MoO4 tetrahedra by corner sharing. The Mo-centred tetrahedra are statistically distributed in four symmetry-related positions, with one-fourth occupancy. In the centre of the cubic unit cell the REE cations exhibit a 6+3 coordination, bonding six oxygen atoms and three H2O molecules, each of them being disorderly distributed in four symmetry-related positions. One of the possible supercells, with a 48-fold volume with respect to the primitive cubic small subcell, corresponded to a rhombohedral lattice, with a≈19.43 and c≈47.60 Å in the hexagonal setting. Several unsuccessful trials were performed to solve the real crystal structure of tancaite, by indexing the additional superstructure reflections and using their intensities to refine an ordered structural model. The new mineral has been approved by the IMA CNMNC (no. 2009-097). The name comes from Giuseppe Tanca, an Italian amateur mineralogist, who discovered the mineral and gave it to us for studying.

Highlights

  • Tancaite-(Ce) occurs in cavities in quartz veins within granite at Su Seinargiu, Sarroch (CA), Sardinia, Italy. It is a secondary mineral formed in the oxidation zone of a sulfide ore vein

  • More than 60 different mineral species have been described from this locality (Orlandi et al, 2015d); among them and in addition to tancaite-(Ce), another seven minerals have Su Seinargiu as the type locality: sardignaite (Orlandi et al, 2010), gelosaite (Orlandi et al, 2011), mambertiite (Orlandi et al, 2015c), susenargiuite (Orlandi et al, 2015b), ichnu

  • The mineral generally occurs as small truncated octahedra (Fig. 1), up to 0.2 mm in size, red or pale brown in colour, transparent, with vitreous to adamantine lustre

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Summary

Introduction

Tancaite-(Ce) occurs in cavities in quartz veins within granite at Su Seinargiu, Sarroch (CA), Sardinia, Italy. It is a secondary mineral formed in the oxidation zone of a sulfide ore vein. Associated minerals are quartz, muscovite, molybdenite, pyrite, and a mendozavilite-like mineral (Orlandi et al., 2013). More than 60 different mineral species have been described from this locality (Orlandi et al, 2015d); among them and in addition to tancaite-(Ce), another seven minerals have Su Seinargiu as the type locality: sardignaite (Orlandi et al, 2010), gelosaite (Orlandi et al, 2011), mambertiite (Orlandi et al, 2015c), susenargiuite (Orlandi et al, 2015b), ichnu-. The holotype of tancaite-(Ce) has been deposited in the collections of the Natural History Museum, University of Pisa, catalogue no. 18911

Appearance and physical properties
Chemical data
X-ray diffraction studies
Solution and refinement of the average structure
Relation to other species
Conclusions
Full Text
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