Leightonite | |
Category: | Sulfate minerals |
Formula: | K2Ca2Cu(SO4)4•2H2O |
Imasymbol: | Lgh[1] |
Strunz: | 7.CC.70 |
System: | Monoclinic |
Class: | Prismatic (2/m) (same H-M symbol) |
Symmetry: | C2/c |
Color: | Pale blue, greenish-blue; pale blue in transmitted light. |
Habit: | Lathlike crystals, flattened, elongated or equant; pseudo-orthorhombic |
Twinning: | Lamellar twinning on (100) and (010) produces pseudo-orthorhombic symmetry |
Cleavage: | None observed |
Mohs: | 3 |
Luster: | Vitreous |
Refractive: | nα = 1.578 nβ = 1.587 nγ = 1.595 |
Opticalprop: | Biaxial (-) |
Birefringence: | δ = 0.017 |
Gravity: | 2.95 |
Diaphaneity: | Transparent, translucent |
References: | [2] |
Leightonite is a rare sulfate mineral with formula of K2Ca2Cu(SO4)4•2H2O.
Leightonite forms flattened to elongated bladed crystals of variously interpreted crystal structure. Its crystal system is reported as triclinic morphologically, but also as pseudo-orthorhombic due to intricate lamellar twinning that mimics orthorhombic symmetry.[2] Because it is triclinic, the crystal is represented by a system of three unequal vectors with corresponding unequal angles between them.
Leightonite is anisotropic, meaning it has more than one refractive index, in this case three as it is biaxial. The mineral can split polarized light into two rays with different direction and velocity, resulting in the appearance of interference colors when recombined and viewed under polarized light.
It was first described in 1938 for an occurrence in the Chuquicamata Mine, Colama, El Loa Province, Antofagasta Region, Chile,[3] and named in honor of Tomas Leighton Donoso (1896–1967), Professor of Mineralogy at the University of Santiago, Chile.[2]
It occurs in alkali oxidized zones of copper deposits and is associated with natrochalcite, blodite, atacamite, bellingerite, kröhnkite, gypsum and quartz in the discovery location at Chuquicamata, Chile, along with chalcanthite, anhydrite and lammerite in Tsumeb, Namibia.[4] It has also been reported from the Schwaz area of North Tyrol, Austria, and the Visdalen Soapstone Quarry, Lom, Norway.[3]
At the mining site of Chuquicamata, Chile, Leightonite is not found in rich ore; rather it only appears in borderland material within 50m (160feet) of the surface, acting as a cement between rock fragments as it fills in cracks and cross-fiber veins in surfaces as a network of crystals.[2] Although a hydrous sulfate of copper, it is not a major source of the element. Because of its rare nature, it is valued by mineral collectors.