Tugarinovite

Tugarinovite is a rare molybdenum oxide mineral with formula MoO2. It occurs as a primary mineral phase associated with metasomatism in a sulfur deficient reducing environment. In the type locality it occurs with uraninite, molybdenite, galena, zircon and wulfenite.[1]

Tugarinovite
General
CategoryOxide mineral
Formula
(repeating unit)
MoO2
Strunz classification4.DB.05
Crystal systemMonoclinic
Crystal classPrismatic H-M symbol (2/m)
Space groupP21/c (no. 14)
Unit cella = 5.6 Å, b = 4.85 Å, c = 5.53 Å; β = 119.37°
Identification
ColorDark lilac-brown
Crystal habitCrystals are tabular striated prisms
TwinningPolysynthetic
Mohs scale hardness4.6
LusterGreasy to metallic
StreakGreenish gray
DiaphaneitySemitransparent
Specific gravity6.58 (calculated)
Optical propertiesBiaxial
PleochroismLight gray to dark pink; pale yellow to bluish olive-brown in reflected light
References[1][2][3]

Tugarinovite was first described for an occurrence in the Lenskoye molybdenum–uranium deposit in the Amurskaya Oblast, Far-Eastern Region, Russia. It was named for geochemist Ivan Alekseevich Tugarinov of the Vernadskii Institute in Moscow.[1][2] In addition to its type locality in Russia it has been reported from the Allende meteorite in Chihuahua, Mexico, the Nansei Archipelago of Japan and Bohemia in the Czech Republic.[2]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.