Fluor-schorl, a new member of the tourmaline supergroup, and new data on schorl from the cotype localities

Author(s)
Andreas Ertl, Uwe Kolitsch, M. Darby Dyar, Hans-Peter Meyer, George R. Rossman, Darell J. Henry, Markus Prem, Thomas Ludwig, Lutz Nasdala, Christian Lengauer, Ekkehart Tillmanns, Gerhard Niedermayr
Abstract

Fluor-schorl, NaFe

2+

3Al

6Si

6O

18(BO

3)

3(OH)

3F, is a new mineral species of the tourmaline supergroup from alluvial tin deposits near Steinberg, Zschorlau, Erzgebirge (Saxonian Ore Mountains), Saxony, Germany, and from pegmatites near Grasstein (area from Mittewald to Sachsenklemme), Trentino, South Tyrol, Italy. Fluor-schorl was formed as a pneumatolytic phase and in high-temperature hydrothermal veins in granitic pegmatites. Crystals are black (pale brownish to pale greyish-bluish, if <0.3 mm in diameter) with a bluish-white streak. Fluor-schorl is brittle and has a Mohs hardness of 7; it is non-fluorescent, has no observable parting and a poor/indistinct cleavage parallel to {0001}. It has a calculated density of ∼3.23 g/cm

3. In plane-polarized light, it is pleochroic, O = brown to grey-brown (Zschorlau), blue (Grasstein), E = pale grey-brown (Zschorlau), cream (Grasstein). Fluorschorl is uniaxial negative, ω = 1.660(2)-1.661(2), ϵ = 1.636(2)-1.637(2). The mineral is rhombohedral, space group R3m, a = 16.005(2), c = 7.176(1) Å,V= 1591.9(4) Å

3(Zschorlau), a = 15.995(1), c = 7.166(1) Å, V= 1587.7(9) Å

3 (Grasstein), Z= 3. The eight strongest observed X-ray diffraction lines in the powder pattern [d in Å(I)hkl] are: 2.584(100)(051), 3.469(99)(012), 2.959(83)(122), 2.044(80)(152), 4.234(40)(211), 4.005(39)(220), 6.382(37)(101), 1.454(36)(514) (Grasstein). Analyses by a combination of electron microprobe, secondary-ion mass spectrometry (SIMS), Mossbauer spectroscopic data and crystal-structure refinement result in the structural formulae

X(Na

0.82K

0.01Ca

0.01

□0.16)

Y(Fe

2+

2.30Al

0.38Mg

0.23Li

0.03Mn

2+

0.02Zn

0.01

□0.03)

Σ3.00

Z(Al

5.80Fe

3+0.10Ti

4+

0.10)

T(Si

5.81Al

0.19O

18) (BO

3)

3

V(OH)

3

W[F

0.66(OH)

0.34] (Zschorlau) and

X(Na

0.78K

0.01

□0.21)

Y(Fe

3+

1.89Al

0.58Fe

3+

0.13Mn

2+

0.13Ti

2+

0.02kMg

0.02Zn

0.02

□0.21)

σ3.00

Z(Al

5.74Fe

3+

0.26)

T(Si

5.90Al

0.10O

18) (BO

3)

3

V(OH)

3

W[F

0.76(OH)

0.24] (Grasstein). Several additional, newly confirmed occurrences of fluor-schorl are reported. Fluor-schorl, ideally NaFe

2+

3Al

6Si

6O

18(BO

3)

3(OH)

3F, is related to end-member schorl by the substution F → (OH). The chemical compositions and refined crystal structures of several schorl samples from cotype localities for schorl (alluvial tin deposits and tin mines in the Erzgebirge, including Zschorlau) are also reported. The unit-cell parameters of schorl from these localities are slightly variable, a = 15.98-15.99, c = 7.15-7.16 Å, corresponding to structural formulae ranging from ∼

X(Na

0.5

0.5)

Y(Fe

2+

1.8Al

0.9Mg

0.2

0.1)

Z(Al

5.8Fe

+

0.1Ti

+

0.1)

T(Si

5.7Al

0.3O

18) (BO

3)

3

V(OH)

3

W[(OH)

0.9F

0.1] to ∼

X(Na

0.7

0.3)

Y(Fe

+

2.1A

l0.7Mg

0.1

0.1)

Z(A

l5.9Fe

+

0.1)

T(Si

5 8Al

0.2O

18) (BO

3)

3

V(OH)

3

W[(OH)

0.6F

0.4]. The investigated tourmalines from the Erzgebirge show that there exists a complete fluor-schorl-schorl solid-solution series. For all studied tourmaline samples, a distinct inverse correlation was observed between the X-O2 distance (which reflects the mean ionic radius of the X-site occupants) and the F content (r

2 = 0.92). A strong positive correlation was found to exist between the F content and the <Y-O> distance (r

2 = 0.93). This correlation indicates that Fe

2+-rich tourmalines from the investigated localities clearly tend to have a F-rich or F-dominant composition. A further strong positive correlation (r

2= 0.82) exists between the refined F content and the Y-W (F,OH) distance, and the latter may be used to quickly estimate the F content.

Organisation(s)
Department of Mineralogy and Crystallography
External organisation(s)
Naturhistorisches Museum Wien (NHM), Mount Holyoke College, Scientific Software Center, California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Louisiana State University
Journal
European Journal of Mineralogy: an international journal of mineralogy, geochemistry and related sciences
Volume
28
Pages
163-177
No. of pages
15
ISSN
0935-1221
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1127/ejm/2015/0027-2501
Publication date
03-2016
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
104026 Spectroscopy, 105116 Mineralogy, 105113 Crystallography
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Geochemistry and Petrology
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/fluorschorl-a-new-member-of-the-tourmaline-supergroup-and-new-data-on-schorl-from-the-cotype-localities(6c87d504-6fc2-40ac-acac-2f741c3fc73d).html