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Bulakh, A. G., Nesterov, A. R., Williams, C. T., Anisimov, I. S. (1998) Zirkelite from the Sebl'yavr carbonatite complex, Kola Peninsula, Russia: an X-ray and electron microprobe study of a partially metamict mineral. Mineralogical Magazine, 62 (6) 837-846 doi:10.1180/002646198548205

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleZirkelite from the Sebl'yavr carbonatite complex, Kola Peninsula, Russia: an X-ray and electron microprobe study of a partially metamict mineral
JournalMineralogical MagazineISSN0026-461X
AuthorsBulakh, A. G.Author
Nesterov, A. R.Author
Williams, C. T.Author
Anisimov, I. S.Author
Year1998 (December)Volume62
Issue6
PublisherMineralogical Society
Download URLhttps://rruff.info/doclib/MinMag/Volume_62/62-6-837.pdf+
DOIdoi:10.1180/002646198548205Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID341Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:341:8
GUID0
Full ReferenceBulakh, A. G., Nesterov, A. R., Williams, C. T., Anisimov, I. S. (1998) Zirkelite from the Sebl'yavr carbonatite complex, Kola Peninsula, Russia: an X-ray and electron microprobe study of a partially metamict mineral. Mineralogical Magazine, 62 (6) 837-846 doi:10.1180/002646198548205
Plain TextBulakh, A. G., Nesterov, A. R., Williams, C. T., Anisimov, I. S. (1998) Zirkelite from the Sebl'yavr carbonatite complex, Kola Peninsula, Russia: an X-ray and electron microprobe study of a partially metamict mineral. Mineralogical Magazine, 62 (6) 837-846 doi:10.1180/002646198548205
Abstract/NotesAbstractZirkelite, a cubic mineral of general formula (Ti,Ca,Zr)O2−x occurs as an accessory mineral in phoscorites, carbonatites and associated rocks in the Sebl'yavr complex. After pyrochlore, it is the main mineral concentrating niobium in these rocks. Zirkelite forms platy crystals comprising polysynthetic octahedral twins, often having a complex skeletal internal structure within a cuboctahedral external morphology. The mineral is largely metamict, but after heating to 800°C it produces a cubic crystalline structure with ao = 5.157 ±0.006 Å. It is black to brownish-black in colour, VHN = 760−780 kg.mm−2, density = 4.27 g.cm−3, and reflectance = 12.5%.Chemically, zirkelite is relatively enriched in Nb2O5 (up to 14.5 wt.%) and ThO2 (up to 7.7 wt.%), and it displays four compositionally-distinct zones which probably formed during primary crystallisation processes. It is patchily altered where it is associated with an unidentified Ba, Ti, Nb, Zr silicate phase which partly replaces and pseudomorphs it. Under the current IMA-approved nomenclature scheme, non-crystalline (metamict) minerals of the composition described here would normally be given the general species name zirconolite, with the name zirkelite confined to the cubic mineral. However, at Sebl'yavr, the name zirkelite is used because the mineral displays a well-defined cubic crystal morphology and has a cubic structure after heating.

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Zirkelite

Mineral Occurrences

LocalityMineral(s)
Seblyavr Massif, Kolsky District, Murmansk Oblast, Russia Baddeleyite, Calcite, Calzirtite, Dolomite, Forsterite, Galena, Magnetite, Pyrochlore Group, Zirkelite


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