Wodginite

 Wodginite is a manganese, tin, tantalum oxide mineral with formula Mn2+(Sn,Ta)Ta2O8. It may include significant niobium.[1][2]

Wodginite
Cassiterite-Wodginite-md36b.jpg
Wodginite over cassiterite
General
CategoryOxide - Tantalate mineral
Formula
(repeating unit)
Mn2+(Sn,Ta)Ta2O8
Strunz classification4.DB.40
Dana classification08.01.08.01
Crystal systemMonoclinic
Crystal classPrismatic (2/m)
(same H-M symbol)
Space groupC2/c (no. 15)
Identification
ColorReddish brown, dark brown to black
Crystal habitFlattened dipyramidal to prismatic crystals in radiating groups; granular, massive.
TwinningVery common as penetration twins
Cleavagenone
FractureIrregular
TenacityBrittle
Mohs scale hardness5.5
LusterSub-metallic
StreakBrown
DiaphaneityOpaque, translucent in thin fragments
Specific gravity7.19–7.36
References[1][2][3][4]

BackgroundEdit

Wodginite was first described in 1963 for an occurrence in the Wodgina pegmatiteWodginaPilbara Region, Western Australia.[3]

Typical occurrence of Wodginite occurs in zoned pegmatites in amphibolite. It is associated with tantalitealbitequartzmuscovitetapiolitemicrolite and microcline.[1]

It occurs in pegmatites in a wide variety of locations. The most studied is the Tanco pegmatite in ManitobaCanada; also in Red Lake, Ontario. It is reported from the Strickland quarry, Portland, Middlesex County, Connecticut; the Herbb #2 pegmatite, Powhatan County, Virginia; the McAllister mine, Rockford, Coosa County, Alabama; the Peerless mine, Pennington County, South Dakota. Also from Paraíba and Minas GeraisBrazilKrasoniceCzech Republic; Orivesi, Finland; Kalba, eastern KazakhstanAnkoleUganda; Miami district, Zimbabwe and Karibib and KoheroNamibia.[1][3]

The figure shows, that the columbite group (including tantalite) and wodginite can be seen as a superstructure of ixiolite.[5]

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.