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Foord, Eugene E., Taggart, Joseph E. (1998) A reexamination of the turquoise group: the mineral aheylite, planerite (redefined), turquoise and coeruleolactite. Mineralogical Magazine, 62 (1) 93-111 doi:10.1180/002646198547495

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleA reexamination of the turquoise group: the mineral aheylite, planerite (redefined), turquoise and coeruleolactite
JournalMineralogical MagazineISSN0026-461X
AuthorsFoord, Eugene E.Author
Taggart, Joseph E.Author
Year1998 (February)Volume62
Page(s)93-111Issue1
PublisherMineralogical Society
Download URLhttps://rruff.info/doclib/MinMag/Volume_62/62-1-93.pdf+
DOIdoi:10.1180/002646198547495Search in ResearchGate
Mindat Ref. ID250Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:250:7
GUID480757cd-811e-4c01-82fc-a9ea5b4ded5a
Full ReferenceFoord, Eugene E., Taggart, Joseph E. (1998) A reexamination of the turquoise group: the mineral aheylite, planerite (redefined), turquoise and coeruleolactite. Mineralogical Magazine, 62 (1) 93-111 doi:10.1180/002646198547495
Plain TextFoord, Eugene E., Taggart, Joseph E. (1998) A reexamination of the turquoise group: the mineral aheylite, planerite (redefined), turquoise and coeruleolactite. Mineralogical Magazine, 62 (1) 93-111 doi:10.1180/002646198547495
In(1998, February) Mineralogical Magazine Vol. 62 (1) Mineralogical Society
Abstract/NotesAbstractThe turquoise group has the general formula:A0–1B6(PO4)4−x(PO3OH)x(OH)8.4H2O, wherex= 0–2, and consists of six members: planerite, turquoise, faustite, aheylite, chalcosiderite and an unnamed Fe2+-Fe3+analogue. The existence of ‘coeruleolactite’ is doubtful. Planerite is revalidated as a species and is characterized by a dominantA-site vacancy. Aheylite is established as a new member of the group, and is characterized by having Fe2+dominant in theA-site.Chemical analyses of 15 pure samples of microcrystalline planerite, turquoise, and aheylite show that a maximum of two of the (PO4) groups are protonated (PO3OH) in planerite. Complete solid solution exists between planerite and turquoise. Other members of the group show variableA-site vacancy as well. Most samples of ‘turquoise’ are cation-deficient or are planerite. Direct determination of water indicates that there are 4 molecules of water.Planerite, ideally ☐Al6(PO4)2(PO3OH)2(OH)8.4H2O, is white, pale blue or pale green, and occurs as mamillary, botryoidal crusts as much as several mm thick; may also be massive; microcrystalline, crystals typically 2–4 micrometres, luster chalky to earthy, H. 5, somewhat brittle, no cleavage observed, splintery fracture, Dm2.68(2), Dc2.71, not magnetic, not fluorescent, mean RI about 1.60.a7.505(2),b9.723(3),c7.814(2) Å, α 111.43°, β 115.56°, γ 68.69°, V 464.2(1) Å3, Z = 1.Aheylite, ideally Fe2+Al6(PO4)4(OH)8.4H2O, is pale blue or green, and occurs as isolated and aggregate clumps of hemispherical or spherical, radiating to interlocked masses of crystals that average 3 micrometres in maximum dimension; porcelaneous-subvitreous luster, moderate to brittle tenacity, no cleavage observed, hackly to splintery fracture, not magnetic, not fluorescent, biax. (+), mean RI is about 1.63, Dm2.84(2), Dc2.90.a7.400(1),b9.896(1),c7.627(1) Å, α 110.87°, β 115.00°, γ 69.96°, V 460.62(9) Å3, Z = 1.

Map of Localities

Locality Pages

LocalityCitation Details
Rotläufchen Mine, Waldgirmes, Lahnau, Lahn-Dill-Kreis, Giessen Region, Hesse, Germany
General Trimble's Mine, East Whiteland Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania, USA

Mineral Pages

MineralCitation Details
Aheylite
Coeruleolactite
Planerite
Turquoise
Turquoise Group
UM1981-32-PO:FeH

Mineral Occurrences

LocalityMineral(s)
Cruzeiro mine, São José da Safira, Minas Gerais, Brazil Planerite-Turquoise Series
Hagendorf, Waidhaus, Neustadt an der Waldnaab District, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany UM1981-32-PO:FeH
Rotläufchen Mine, Waldgirmes, Lahnau, Lahn-Dill-Kreis, Giessen Region, Hesse, Germany Planerite-Turquoise Series
General Trimble's Mine, East Whiteland Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania, USA Coeruleolactite, Planerite


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