Arsenate mineral explained

Arsenate minerals usually refer to the naturally occurring orthoarsenates, possessing the (AsO4)3− anion group and, more rarely, other arsenates with anions like AsO3(OH)2− (also written HAsO42−) (example: pharmacolite Ca(AsO3OH).2H2O) or (very rarely) [AsO<sub>2</sub>(OH)<sub>2</sub>] (example: andyrobertsite). Arsenite minerals are much less common.[1] Both the Dana[2] and the Strunz[3] mineral classifications place the arsenates in with the phosphate minerals.

Example arsenate minerals include:

Nickel–Strunz Classification -08- Phosphates

IMA-CNMNC proposes a new hierarchical scheme (Mills et al., 2009). This list uses it to modify the Classification of Nickel–Strunz (mindat.org, 10 ed, pending publication).

Class: arsenates and vanadates

References

Notes and References

  1. http://webmineral.com/dana/dana.php?class=45 Webmineral
  2. http://webmineral.com/danaclass.shtml Webmineral Dana system
  3. http://webmineral.com/strunz.shtml Webmineral Strunz system