Publication details

Tsygankoite, Mn8Tl8Hg2(Sb21Pb2Tl)(Sigma 24)S-48, a New Sulfosalt from the Vorontsovskoe Gold Deposit, Northern Urals, Russia

Authors

KASATKIN AV MAKOVICKY E. PLÁŠIL J. ŠKODA Radek AGAKHANOV AA KARPENKO VY NESTOLA F.

Year of publication 2018
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Minerals
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/min8050218
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/min8050218
Keywords tsygankoite; new sulfosalt; thallium; crystal structure; Vorontsovskoe gold deposit
Description Tsygankoite, ideally Mn8Tl8Hg2(Sb21Pb2Tl)(Sigma 24)S-48, is a new sulfosalt discovered at the Vorontsovskoe gold deposit, Northern Urals, Russia. It occurs as lath-like elongated crystals up to 0.2 mm embedded in calcite-dolomite-clinochlore matrix. The associated minerals also include aktashite, alabandite, arsenopyrite, barite, cinnabar, fluorapatite, orpiment, pyrite, realgar, routhierite, sphalerite, tilasite, and titanite. The new mineral is non-fluorescent, black, and opaque with a metallic lustre and black streak. It is brittle with an uneven fracture and no obvious parting and cleavage. Its Vickers hardness (VHN10) is 144 kg/mm(2) (range 131-167 kg/mm(2)) and its calculated density is 5.450 g.cm(-3). In reflected light, tsygankoite is white; between crossed polars it is dark grey to black. It is strongly anisotropic: rotation tints vary from light grey to dark grey to black. Pleochroism and internal reflections are not observed. The chemical composition of tsygankoite (wt %, electron-microprobe data) is: Mn 6.29, Hg 5.42, Tl 26.05, Pb 5.84, As 3.39, Sb 30.89, S 21.87, total 99.75. The empirical formula, calculated on the basis of 90 atoms pfu, is: Mn8.06Tl8.00Hg1.90(Sb17.87As3.19Pb1.99Tl0.97)Sigma S-24.02(48.03). Tsygankoite is monoclinic, space group C2/m, a = 21.362(4) angstrom, b = 3.8579(10) angstrom, c = 27.135(4) angstrom, = 106.944(14)degrees, V = 2139.19(17) angstrom(3) and Z = 1. The five strongest diffraction peaks from X-ray powder pattern (listed as (d,angstrom(I)(hkl)) are: 3.587(100)(112), 3.353(70)(-114), 3.204(88)(405), 2.841(72)(-513), and 2.786(99)(-514). The crystal structure of tsygankoite was refined from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data to R = 0.0607 and consists of an alternation of two thick layer-like arrays, one based on PbS-archetype and the second on SnS-archetype. Tsygankoite has been approved by the IMA-CNMNC under the number 2017-088. It is named for Mikhail V. Tsyganko, a mineral collector from Severouralsk, Northern Urals, Russia, who collected the samples where the new mineral was discovered.

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