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Mills, S. J., Kampf, A. R., McDonald, A. M., Favreau, G., Chiappero, P.-J. (2012) Forêtite, a new secondary arsenate mineral from the Cap Garonne mine, France. Mineralogical Magazine, 76 (3) 769-775 doi:10.1180/minmag.2012.076.3.24

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleForêtite, a new secondary arsenate mineral from the Cap Garonne mine, France
JournalMineralogical Magazine
AuthorsMills, S. J.Author
Kampf, A. R.Author
McDonald, A. M.Author
Favreau, G.Author
Chiappero, P.-J.Author
Year2012 (June)Volume76
Page(s)769-775Issue3
PublisherMineralogical Society
Download URLhttps://rruff.info/rruff_1.0/uploads/MM76_769.pdf+
DOIdoi:10.1180/minmag.2012.076.3.24Search in ResearchGate
Classification
Not set
LoC
Not set
Mindat Ref. ID244250Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:244250:5
GUIDa71bd1b0-643a-4cbb-9c1a-49bc80d5487f
Full ReferenceMills, S. J., Kampf, A. R., McDonald, A. M., Favreau, G., Chiappero, P.-J. (2012) Forêtite, a new secondary arsenate mineral from the Cap Garonne mine, France. Mineralogical Magazine, 76 (3) 769-775 doi:10.1180/minmag.2012.076.3.24
Plain TextMills, S. J., Kampf, A. R., McDonald, A. M., Favreau, G., Chiappero, P.-J. (2012) Forêtite, a new secondary arsenate mineral from the Cap Garonne mine, France. Mineralogical Magazine, 76 (3) 769-775 doi:10.1180/minmag.2012.076.3.24
Abstract/NotesForêtite, ideally Cu2Al2(AsO4)(OH,O,H2O)6, is a new secondary arsenate mineral from the Cap Garonne mine, Var, France (IMA2011-100). It has also been identified at the Salsigne gold mine, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. Although it was identified as a potentially new mineral in 1993, a formal description has only been possible as a result of a new find in a chamber called Annex S located near the entrance of the Cap Garonne mine. Forêtite occurs as pale sky blue to aqua aggregates, up to ∼0.1 mm across, made up of minute plates no more than 20 μm in length. It has a very pale blue streak. Individual crystals have a vitreous lustre and are transparent, whereas clusters appear translucent. The calculated density is 3.286 g cm–3. The crystals are brittle, with an irregular fracture and have a hardness of ∼3–4 on Moh's scale. Forêtite is found in direct association with bariopharmacoalumite, cyanotrichite, parnauite, chalcophyllite and mansfieldite in an Al-rich assemblage which is presumed to have formed under acidic conditions. It is biaxial; the average refractive index measured in white light on aggregates of forêtite crystals is 1.620(5). The empirical formula (based on 10 oxygen atoms per formula unit) is Cu1.94(Al1.96Fe0.04)Σ2.00(As0.84S0.09Si0.04)Σ0.97O10H5.19. Raman spectroscopy confirms the presence of OH and H2O in the structure. Forêtite is triclinic, space group P, with a = 6.969(9), b = 7.676(9), c = 8.591(11) Å, α = 82.01(9), β = 71.68(8), γ = 102.68(8)°, V = 415(1) Å3 and Z = 2. The five strongest lines in the X-ray powder diffraction pattern [d in A ˚ , (I), (hkl)] are as follows: 7.307, (100), (010, 00); 3.141, (24), (200, 00); 2.818, (24), (20, 20); 4.519, (23), (111); 2.343, (22), (11). The mineral is named in honour of Dr Jean-Paul Forêt, who co-founded the project that turned the Cap Garonne mine into a protected site and museum.

Map of Localities

Locality Pages

LocalityCitation Details
Cap Garonne Mine, Le Pradet, Toulon, Var, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France

Mineral Pages

MineralCitation Details
Forêtite

Mineral Occurrences

LocalityMineral(s)
Salsigne mine, Salsigne, Carcassonne, Aude, Occitanie, France Forêtite


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