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Published July 2020 | public
Journal Article

Müllerite, the Fe-analogue of backite from Otto Mountain, California, USA

Abstract

Müllerite (IMA2019–060) is a new mineral found at several workings on Otto Mountain, 2.5 km NW of Baker, San Bernardino County, California, USA. Müllerite occurs as hexagonal tablets and thin plates up to 0.2 mm across, intergrown ball-like clusters, and scattered flakes. Crystals are yellow, tending to reddish-orange, and have a pale-yellow streak and subadamantine to greasy luster. Crystals are brittle with an irregular fracture and have a hardness of ∼2 and perfect cleavage on {001}. The main forms observed are {100} and {001}. The calculated density is 5.812 g/cm³. The empirical formula (based on 7 O + Cl + I apfu) is Pb_(1.83)Ag_(0.26)Fe_(0.93)Al_(0.03)Cu_(0.02)Te⁶⁺(0.95)O_(5.56)Cl_(1.30)I_(0.14); the endmember formula is Pb₂Fe³⁺(Te⁶⁺O₆)Cl. Müllerite is trigonal, space group P312, with the unit cell parameters a = 5.2040(5), c = 8.9654(12) Å, V = 210.23(3) ų, and Z = 1. The crystal structure of müllerite was refined using Rietveld analysis and converged to R_(wp) = 4.861%, S = 0.1873, R_B = 1.800%, and R_F = 0.691%. Müllerite is the Fe-analogue of backite, Pb₂Al³⁺(Te⁶⁺O₆)Cl.

Additional Information

© 2020 Mineralogical Association of Canada. Received March 22, 2020. Revised manuscript accepted May 25, 2020. This study was partly funded by The Ian Potter Foundation grant 'tracking tellurium' to SJM. At Caltech, the microprobe analyses and Raman studies were funded by grants from the Northern California Mineralogical Society and NSF grant EAR-1322082. The work at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County was partly funded by the John Jago Trelawney Endowment.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023