Mckelveyite-(Y)

(repeating unit)Ba3Na(Ca,U)Y(CO3)6·3H2OIMA symbolMkv-Y[1]Strunz classification5.CC.05Crystal systemTriclinicCrystal classPedial (1)
(same H-M symbol)Space groupP1Unit cella = 9.170(3) Å,
b = 9.169(3) Å,
c = 7.075(2) Å;
α = 102.50(3)°, β = 115.63(3)°,
γ = 59.99(3)°; Z = 1IdentificationColorLime-yellow, greenish gray, reddish brown, may be black from contained organic materialCrystal habitTabular, pyramidalTwinningThreefold (pseudorhombohedral about {0001})CleavageIndistinctMohs scale hardness3.5–4LusterVitreous, greasy, or dullStreakWhiteDiaphaneityTransparent to opaqueSpecific gravity3.25Optical propertiesBiaxial (−)Refractive indexnα = 1.550–1.554 nβ = 1.550–1.554 nγ = 1.649–1.658Birefringenceδ 0.0990–0.1040PleochroismVisibleOther characteristics RadioactiveReferences[2][3][4]

Mckelveyite-(Y) is a hydrated sodium, barium, yttrium, and uranium–containing carbonate mineral, with the chemical formula Ba3Na(Ca,U)Y(CO3)6·3H2O.[2][3]

Occurrence

It was first described in 1965 from deposits in the Green River Formation, Sweetwater County, Wyoming, and is named after Vincent Ellis McKelvey (1916–1985), a former director of the United States Geological Survey.[5]

It occurs associate with trona layers in the Green River Formation of Wyoming and has been reported from an alkalic intrusive, the Khibiny Massif in the Kola Peninsula of Russia. It occurs in association with ewaldite, acmite, biotite, quartz, labuntsovite, searlesite and leucosphenite in the Green River Formation. In the Khibiny Massif it occurs with ewaldite, belovite-(Ce), fluorite, nenadkevichite, ancylite-(Ce), synchysite-(Ce), kukharenkoite-(Y), burbankite, calcite, barite and orthoclase. In the Khanneshin complex, Afghanistan it occurs with dolomite, calkinsite-(Ce), carbocernaite, khanneshite and barite.[2] It has also been reported from the Mont Saint-Hilaire intrusive complex in Quebec.

A related neodymium-rich mineral, mckelveyite-(Nd) has been described for an occurrence in the Vuoriyarvi alkaline-ultrabasic massif on the Kola Peninsula. However, the mineral has not been approved by the IMA.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Warr, L.N. (2021). "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols". Mineralogical Magazine. 85 (3): 291–320. Bibcode:2021MinM...85..291W. doi:10.1180/mgm.2021.43. S2CID 235729616.
  2. ^ a b c Anthony, John W.; Richard A. Bideaux; Kenneth W. Bladh; Monte C. Nichols (1995). Handbook of Mineralogy (PDF). Tucson, Arizona: Mineral Data Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9622097-1-0.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ a b "Mckelveyite-(Y)". webmineral.com. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
  4. ^ Mckelveyite-(Y) on Mindat.org
  5. ^ Milton, C.; B. Ingram; J.R. Clark; E.J. Dwornik (1965). "Mckelveyite, a new hydrous sodium barium rare-earth uranium carbonate mineral from the Green River Formation, Wyoming" (PDF). Am. Mineral. 50: 593–612.
  6. ^ Mindat


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