Santabarbaraite

Santabarbaraite is an amorphous ferric hydroxy phosphate mineral hydrate that was discovered in TuscanyItaly in 2000.[3] It also can be found in Victoria, Australia and Lake BaikalSiberia.[4] This phosphate mineral has a simplified formula Fe3+3(PO4)2(OH)3·5H2O,[3] which is the same formula of another non-amorphous phosphate mineral called allanpringite.[5] Santabarbaraite occurs as pseudomorphic masses after vivianite (Fe2+3(PO4)2·8H2O). In the process, monoclinic vivianite oxidizes to form the amorphous santabarbaraite.[3] Pseudomorphism can be seen in Victoria, Australia in Wannon Falls which is originally a well-known locality for vivianite and at Lake Baikal, Siberia where the oxidized santabarbaraite can be seen as a rim surrounding vivianite due to exposure to air.[4]

Santabarbaraite
Santabarbaraite-Vivianite-mrz341b.jpg
Santabarbaraite (pseudomorph) after vivianite
General
CategoryPhosphate minerals
Formula
(repeating unit)
Fe3+3(PO4)2(OH)3·5H2O
Strunz classification8.CE.80
Crystal systemAmorphous
Identification
ColorBrown/light brown
Crystal habitElongated or flattened prisms
TwinningNone
CleavageNone, parting along {010} of replaced phase
FractureConchoidal
Mohs scale hardnessNot determined
LusterVitreous/greasy
Streakyellow-umber
DiaphaneityTranslucent
Specific gravity2.24
Optical propertiesisotropic
Refractive indexn = 1.659
Other characteristicsPseudomorphism
References[1][2]

Physical propertiesEdit

Santabarbaraite samples, due to pseudomorphism, show elongated and flattened prism habits. The bulk crystal color is brown to light brown and but appears yellow brown when viewed in an optical microscope. The mineral's streak color is also yellow-umber.[3] Santabarbaraite has a vitreous to greasy luster and shows no fluorescence under ultra violet light. It is also translucent and shows good parting along the cleavage of its original mineral vivianite at {010}. Santabarbaraite's density is 2.24 g/cm3. The mineral is isotropic with refractive index n=1.659.[3]

The nameEdit

Santabarbaraite is named after the mining district Santa Barbara in Italy where it was found. The name also honors Saint Barbara, the saint of miners[3] which makes the mineral one of few named after women.

Geologic occurrenceEdit

Santabarbaraite occurs in several places. It occurs in the Valderno Superiore lignite-bearing basin in the Santa Barbara mining district, Tuscany, Italy.[3] Santabarbaraite samples can also be seen in Victoria, Australia underlying Pliocene basalt beneath Wannon Falls.[3] It is also found in samples from Lake Baikal, Siberia. 


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 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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