Tennantite Explained

Tennantite
Category:Sulfosalt minerals
Strunz:2.GB.05
System:Cubic
Class:Hextetrahedral (3m)
H-M symbol: (3m)
Symmetry:I3m
Color:Flint-gray to iron-black, cherry-red in transmitted light
Habit:massive to well formed crystals
Twinning:Contact and penetration twins
Cleavage:None
Fracture:Subconchoidal to uneven
Tenacity:Somewhat brittle
Mohs:34.5
Luster:Metallic, commonly splendent
Streak:reddish gray
Polish:gray, inclining to black to brown to cherry-red
Refractive:n greater than 2.72
Opticalprop:Isotropic
Gravity:4.65
Diaphaneity:Opaque, except in very thin fragments
References:[1] [2] [3]

Tennantite is a copper arsenic sulfosalt mineral with an ideal formula . Due to variable substitution of the copper by iron and zinc the formula is .[1] It is gray-black, steel-gray, iron-gray or black in color. A closely related mineral, tetrahedrite) has antimony substituting for arsenic and the two form a solid solution series. The two have very similar properties and is often difficult to distinguish between tennantite and tetrahedrite. Iron, zinc, and silver substitute up to about 15% for the copper site.[1] [2]

The mineral was first described for an occurrence in Cornwall, England in 1819, where it occurs as small crystals of cubic or dodecahedral form, and was named after the English chemist Smithson Tennant (1761–1815).[1] [4]

It is found in hydrothermal veins and contact metamorphic deposits in association with other Cu–Pb–Zn–Ag sulfides and sulfosalts, pyrite, calcite, dolomite, siderite, barite, fluorite and quartz.[2]

The arsenic component of tennantite causes the metal smelted from the ore to be harder than that of pure copper, because it is a copper-arsenic alloy. In the later 20th century, it was found that arsenical coppers had been more widely used in antiquity than had been previously realised, and it has been proposed that discoveries made by smelting ores like tennantite were significant steps in the progress towards the Bronze Age.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.mindat.org/min-3911.html Mindat.org
  2. http://rruff.geo.arizona.edu/doclib/hom/tennantite.pdf Handbook of Mineralogy
  3. http://www.webmineral.com/data/Tennantite.shtml Webmineral data
  4. Tetrahedrite. 26. 670–671. Leonard James. Spencer. Leonard James Spencer.