Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-n9wrp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-18T07:20:59.707Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Kingstonite, (Rh,Ir,Pt)3S4, a new mineral species from Yubdo, Ethiopia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2018

C. J. Stanley*
Affiliation:
Department of Mineralogy, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK
A. J. Criddle
Affiliation:
Department of Mineralogy, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK
J. Spratt
Affiliation:
Department of Mineralogy, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK
A. C. Roberts
Affiliation:
Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0E8
J. T. Szymański
Affiliation:
Canmet, 555 Booth Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0G1
M. D. Welch
Affiliation:
Department of Mineralogy, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK

Abstract

Kingstonite, ideally Rh3S4, is a new mineral from the Bir Bir river, Yubdo District, Wallaga Province, Ethiopia. It occurs as subhedral, tabular elongate to anhedral inclusions in a Pt-Fe nugget with the associated minerals isoferroplatinum, tetraferroplatinum, a Cu-bearing Pt-Fe alloy, osmium, enriched oxide remnants of osmium, laurite, bowieite, ferrorhodsite and cuprorhodsite. It is opaque with a metallic lustre, has a black streak, is brittle and has a subconchoidal fracture and a good cleavage parallel to [001]. VHN25 is 871–920 kg/mm2. In plane-polarized reflected light, kingstonite is a pale slightly brownish grey colour. It is weakly pleochroic and displays a weak bireflectance. It does not possess internal reflections. The anisotropy is weak to moderate in dull greys and browns. Reflectance data and colour values are tabulated. Average results of twenty electron microprobe analyses on four grains give Rh 46.5, Ir 16.4, Pt 11.2, S 25.6, total 99.7 wt.%. The empirical formula is (Rh2.27Ir0.43Pt0.29)Σ2.99S4.01, based on 7 atoms per formula unit (a.p.f.u.). Kingstonite is monoclinic (C2/m) with a = 10.4616(5), b = 10.7527(5), c = 6.2648(3) Å, β = 109.000(5)°, V = 666.34(1) Å3 (Z = 6). The calculated density is 7.52 g/cm3 (on the basis of the empirical formula and unit-cell parameters refined from powder data). The seven strongest X-ray powder-diffraction lines [d in Å(I) (hkl)] are: 3.156 (100) (310), 3.081 (100) (31), 2.957 (90) (002), 2.234 (60) (202), 1.941 (50) (23), 1.871 (80) (41) and 1.791 (90) (060, 33). The structure of kingstonite was solved and refined to Rp = 3.8%. There are four distinct metal sites with Rh occupancies of 0.64–0.89. Two metal sites are regular RhS6 octahedra that share edges to form a ribbon running parallel to c. The other two metal sites are coordinated by 4 S + 2 Rh and 5 S + 2 Rh and define a puckered Rh6 ring. The ribbons of regular RhS6 octahedra alternate with the columns of Rh6 rings linked by S atoms. S–S bridges also connect the ribbons and columns. As such, the kingstonite structure is essentially that of synthetic Rh3S4. Minor differences in the unit-cell parameters, atom coordinates and displacement parameters of kingstonite and synthetic Rh3S4 arise from the considerable substitution of Ir for Rh. The mineral name honours Gordon Kingston (formerly of Cardiff University) in recognition of his contributions to platinum group element mineralogy and the geology of their mineral deposits.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

deceased

References

Augé, T. (1988) Platinum group minerals in the Tiebaghi and Vourinos ophiolitic complexes: genetic implications. The Canadian Mineralogist, 26, 177192.Google Scholar
Augé, T. and Maurizot, P. (1995) Stratiform and alluvial platinum mineralisation in the New Caledonia ophiolite complex. The Canadian Mineralogist, 33, 10231045.Google Scholar
Beck, J. and Hilbert, T. (2000) Ein ‘altes’ Rhodium sulfid mit überraschender Struktur: Synthese, Kristallstruktur und elektronische Eigenschaften von Rh3S4 . Zeitschrift für Anorganische und Allgemeine Chemie, 626, 7279.3.0.CO;2-I>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowles, J.F.W. (2000) Prassoite, vysotskite and keithconnite from the Freetown Layered Complex, Sierra Leone. Mineralogy and Petrology, 68, 7584.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Britvin, S.N., Rudashevsky, N.S., Bogdanova, A.N. and Shcherbachev, D.K. (2001) Miassite Rh17S15. A new mineral from a placer of the Miass River, Urals. Zapiski Vsesoyuznovo Mineralogicheskovo Obshchestva, 130, 4145.(in Russian).Google Scholar
Cabri, L.J. (1981) The Platinum-Group Minerals. Pp 83150 in: Platinum-group elements. Mineralogy, Geology and Recovery (Cabri, L.J., editor). Special Vol. 23, Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy.Google Scholar
Cabri, L.J. and Laflamme, J.H.G. (1981) Analyses of minerals containing platinum group elements. Pp. 151 — 174 in: Platinum-group elements. Mineralogy, Geology and Recovery (Cabri, L.J., editor). Special Vol. 23, Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy.Google Scholar
Cabri, L.J., Criddle, A.J., Laflamme, J.H.G., Bearne, G.S. and Harris, D.C. (1981) Mineralogical study of complex Pt-Fe nuggets from Ethiopia. Bulletin de Mineralogie, 104, 508525.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Criddle, A.J., Stanley, C.J., Chisholm, J.E. and Fejer, E.E. (1983) Henryite, a new copper-silver telluride from Bisbee, Arizona. Bulletin de Mineralogie, 106, 511517.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evstigneeva, T.L., Kudryavtsev, A.S. and Rudashevsky, N.S. (1992) Minerals of the platinum group elements from Yubdo (Ethiopia): new data. MineralogichesMi Zhurnal, 14, 2941.(in Russian).Google Scholar
Gabe, E.J., Le Page, Y., Charland, J.-P., Lee, F.L. and White, P.S. (1989) NRCVAX - an interactive program for structure analysis. Journal of Applied Crystallography, 22, 384387.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jambor, J.L., Grew, E.S. and Roberts, A.C. (2002) New Mineral Names. American Mineralogist, 87, 15091513.Google Scholar
Mogessie, A., Belete, K., Hoinkes, G. and Ettinger, K. (1999) Platinum mineralisation in the Yubdo ultramafic rocks, western Ethiopia. Pp. 751754 in: Mineral Deposits: Processes to Processing (Stanley, C.J., Rankin, A.H., Bodnar, R.J., Naden, J., Yardley, B.W.D., Criddle, A.J., Hagni, R.D., Gize, A.P., Pasava, J., Fleet, A.J., Seltmann, R., Halls, C., Stemprok, M., Williamson, B., Herrington, R.J., Hill, R.E.T., Prichard, H.M., Wall, F., Williams, C.T., McDonald, I., Wilkinson, J.J., Cooke, D., Cook, N.J., Marshall, B.J., Spry, P., Zaw, Khin, Meinert, L., Sundblad, K., Scott, P., Clark, S.H.B., Valsami-Jones, E., Beukes, N.J., Stein, H.J., Hannah, J.L., F. Neubauer, Blundell, D.J., Alderton, D.H.M., Smith, M.P., Mulshaw, S. and Ixer, R.A., editors). Balkema, Rotterdam. 1468 pp.Google Scholar
Peckett, A. (1992) The Colours of Opaque Minerals. John Wiley, Chichester, UK, 471 pp.Google Scholar
Pouchou, J.L. and Pichoir, F. (1985) “PAP” (ϕ-ρ-Z) procedure for improved quantitative microanalysis. Pp. 104106 in: Microbeam Analysis (Armstrong, J.T., editor). San Francisco Press, San Francisco, California.Google Scholar
Stanley, C.J. and Laflamme, J.H.G. (1998) Preparation of specimens for advanced ore-mineral and environmental studies. Pp 111 —121 in: Modern Approaches to Ore and Environmental Mineralogy (Cabri, L.J. and Vaughan, D.J., editors). Short Course Series, 27, Mineralogical Association of Canada.Google Scholar
Strunz, H. and Nickel, E.H. (2001) Strunz Mineralogical Tables. Chemical-Structural Mineral Classification System, 9th edition. Schweizerbart'sche, Stuttgart, Germany, 870 pp.Google Scholar