Tinnunculite | |
Category: | Organic mineral |
Formula: | C5H4N4O3 · 2H2O |
Imasymbol: | Tnn[1] |
System: | Monoclinic |
Class: | 2/m - prismatic |
Symmetry: | ' |
Color: | White |
Tenacity: | Earthy (dull) |
References: | [2] |
Tinnunculite is a naturally-occurring form of dihydrate of uric acid. It should not be confused with a proposed mineral species with the identical name 'Tinnunculite', that forms when droppings from a European kestrel react with the burning dumps of coal mines and quarries. The name tinnunculite is derived from the kestrel's binomial name, "Falco tinnunculus", which is itself derived from the Latin word Latin: tinnunculus, meaning "kestrel", from Latin: tinnulus, meaning "shrill".[3] Tinnunculite is a naturally occurring form of the same type of origin.
The mineral is a dihydrate of uricite to which it is visually very similar. Tinnunculite is chemically similar to other organic minerals: guanine, uricite; also acetamide, kladnoite.[2] A new mineral proposal with the same name but slightly different formula (C10H12N8O8) was submitted by Chesnokov & Shcherbakova and ultimately rejected by the International Mineralogical Association (IMA) on the basis of being of anthropogenic origin.[4]
Russia
Mount Rasvumchorr, Khibiny Massif, Kola Peninsula, Murmanskaja Oblast, Northern Region.