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Hydroxyl-bearing bortolanite from the Lovozero alkaline massif, Kola Peninsula, Russia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2024

Ekaterina A. Selivanova*
Affiliation:
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 14 Fersman Street Apatity 184209 Murmansk Region, Russia Nanomaterials Research Centre, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 14 Fersman Street Apatity 184209 Murmansk Region, Russia
Yakov A. Pakhomovsky
Affiliation:
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 14 Fersman Street Apatity 184209 Murmansk Region, Russia Nanomaterials Research Centre, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 14 Fersman Street Apatity 184209 Murmansk Region, Russia
Lyudmila M. Lyalina
Affiliation:
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 14 Fersman Street Apatity 184209 Murmansk Region, Russia
Alena A. Kompanchenko
Affiliation:
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 14 Fersman Street Apatity 184209 Murmansk Region, Russia
Julia A. Mikhailova
Affiliation:
Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 14 Fersman Street Apatity 184209 Murmansk Region, Russia Nanomaterials Research Centre, Kola Science Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 14 Fersman Street Apatity 184209 Murmansk Region, Russia
Andrey A. Zolotarev
Affiliation:
St. Petersburg State University, Department of Crystallography, 7/9 Universitetskaya Emb. St. Petersburg 199034, Russia
*
Corresponding author: Ekaterina A. Selivanova; Email: e.selivanova@ksc.ru
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Abstract

Bortolanite, a rare mineral of the rinkite group, seidozerite supergroup occurs in two different associations in the Lovozero massif in the Kola Peninsula, Russia: (1) together with ferri-katophorite and phlogopite, it forms porous or mesh aggregates (symplectitic accretions) with euhedral contours in the contact zone of a volcano–sedimentary xenolith and eudialyte lujavrite at Kuamdespakhk Mt and (2) in intergrowths with titanite and fluorcaphite in the poikilitic feldspathoid syenites at Sengischorr Mt. In both cases, bortolanite was found in association with rosenbuschite that is close to it in chemical composition, but unlike bortolanite, it contains no REEs. The mineral is triclinic, space group P$\bar{1}$, a = 9.5807(5), b = 5.6943(4), c = 7.2813(4) Å, α = 89.891(5)°, β = 100.959(4)°, γ = 101.241(5)°, V = 382.25(4) Å3 and Z = 1.

The Lovozero bortolanite differs from the Brazilian holotype sample from de Caldas alkaline massif, Minas Gerais, due to the presence of (OH)-groups in its composition, which is indicated by Raman data. A combination of single-crystal X-ray diffraction data and electron microprobe data provides the following crystal-chemical formula: (Ca1.97Ce0.01Nd0.01Th0.01)Σ2(Ca1.39Zr0.61)Σ2(Na0.72Ca0.28)Σ1(Na1.36Ca0.56Mn0.03Zn0.01)Σ1.96(Ti0.78Zr0.08Nb0.05Mg0.05Fe0.04)Σ1Si4O14((OH)0.92O0.87F0.21)Σ2F2.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Mineralogical Society of the United Kingdom and Ireland

Introduction

The list of minerals in one of the richest mineralogical provinces of the world, the Lovozero alkaline massif, contains more than 400 species, of which about a third are rare and very rare. The rinkite group (Table 1), which belongs to the seidozerite supergroup (Sokolova and Cámara, Reference Sokolova and Cámara2017), includes 14 mineral species and is currently represented in the Lovozero massif by the following four species (marked in bold in Table 1): rinkite-(Ce) (Ca3REE)Na(NaCa)Ti(Si2O7)2(OF)F2, rosenbuschite Ca6Zr2Na6ZrTi(Si2O7)4(OF)2F4, seidozerite Na2Zr2Na2MnTi(Si2O7)2O2F2 and bortolanite Ca2(Ca1.5Zr0.5)Na(NaCa)Ti(Si2O7)2(OF)F2 described in this study (where REE is rare earth elements). Two more minerals, mosandrite-(Ce) (referred as ‘hydro-rincolite’) and götzenite, have been documented, but not reliably characterised (Semenov, Reference Semenov1972). In recent decades, much attention has been paid to the minerals of this group: classification principles have been developed (Sokolova and Cámara, Reference Sokolova and Cámara2017); the nomenclature has been revised; and new mineral species such as batievaite-(Y) (Lyalina et al., Reference Lyalina, Zolotarev, Selivanova, Savchenko, Krivovichev, Mikhailova, Kadyrova and Zozulya2016), rinkite-(Y) (Pautov et al., Reference Pautov, Agakhanov, Karpenko, Uvarova, Sokolova and Hawthorne2019) and nacareniobsite-(Y) have been discovered (Agakhanov et al., Reference Agakhanov, Day, Sokolova, Karpenko, Hawthorne, Pautov, Pekov, Kasatkin and Agakhanova2023).

Table 1. Ideal structural formulae for rinkite-group minerals.

Data given according to Sokolova and Cámara (Reference Sokolova and Cámara2017), except for rinkite-(Y) (Pautov et al., Reference Pautov, Agakhanov, Karpenko, Uvarova, Sokolova and Hawthorne2019), nacareniobsite-(Y) (Agakhanov et al., Reference Agakhanov, Day, Sokolova, Karpenko, Hawthorne, Pautov, Pekov, Kasatkin and Agakhanova2023) and bortolanite (Day et al., Reference Day, Sokolova, Hawthorne, Horváth and Pfenninger-Horváth2022). The mineral species known to occur in the Lovozero massif are in bold. Sites given according to Sokolova (Reference Sokolova2006): MH = cations of the H sheet; MO = cations of the O sheet; AP = cations at the peripheral (P) sites, 2XOM + 2XOA = anions of the O sheet not shared with Si2O7 groups.

Bortolanite (Btln), Ca2(Ca1.5Zr0.5)Na(NaCa)Ti(Si2O7)2(OF)F2, was discovered in nepheline syenites of the Poços de Caldas alkaline massif, Minas Gerais, Brazil. The mineral was named after the Bortolan quarry. The Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification of the International Mineralogical Association (IMA–CNMNC) approved it in 2021 under the number IMA2021-040a, and in 2022 a complete study of the mineral was published (Day et al., Reference Day, Sokolova, Hawthorne, Horváth and Pfenninger-Horváth2022).

The authors of this study have found bortolanite in two locations in the Lovozero massif: (1) at the contact of alkaline rocks with roof xenoliths at Kuamdespakhk Mt; and (2) in poikilitic feldspathoid syenites at Sengischorr Mt. This article focuses on the characterisation and discussion of the specific properties of the Lovozero bortolanite, which is the second find of this mineral in the world and the first one in Russia. At the same time, this article is not a simple description of a specific case, but expands knowledge about mineralogical relationships, as well as crystal chemistry and isomorphism of rinkite-related minerals in general.

Geological background

The Lovozero alkaline massif (Fig. 1a), which formed 360–370 Ma (Kramm and Kogarko, Reference Kramm and Kogarko1994; Wu et al., Reference Wu, Yang, Marks, Liu, Zhou, Ge, Yang, Zhao, Mitchell and Markl2010; Mitchell et al., Reference Mitchell, Wu and Yang2011), is a layered laccolith located in the southwest of the Kola Peninsula, Russia, among Archean gneisses and granite–gneisses.

Figure 1. Geological scheme of the Lovozero alkaline massif after (Saprykina et al., Reference Saprykina, Zhadritskii, Panteleimonov and Tereshkov1977), with simplifications (a) and sampling points. (b) Xenolith of volcanoclastic rock in eudialyte lujavrite (sampling point LV–152/4); (c) photo of a thin section of LV–152/4 in transmitted light; the white arrow shows the bortolanite location; (d) poikilitic feldspathoid syenite in eudialyte lujavrite (sampling point LV-02–1–3); (e) photo of sample LV-02–1–3; the red arrow shows the bortolanite location.

The Lovozero massif consists of the following three main units (Fig. 1a): Layered, Eudialyte and Poikilitic complexes (Vlasov et al., Reference Vlasov, Kuzmenko and Eskova1966; Gerasimovsky et al., Reference Gerasimovsky, Volkov, Kogarko, Polyakov, Saprykina and Balashov1966; Bussen and Sakharov, Reference Bussen and Sakharov1972). The first, Layered, complex consists of numerous sub-horizontal layers (or rhythms). Each of the rhythms is a sequence of the following rocks: lujavrite–foyaite–urtite or lujavrite–foyaite. Lujavrite is a trachytoid meso- to melanocratic nepheline syenite; foyaite is a massive to weakly trachytoid leucocratic nepheline syenite; urtite is a massive monomineral nepheline rock. The main rock type of the Eudialyte complex is lujavrite enriched in eudialyte-group minerals, so-called eudialyte lujavrite. The third, the Poikilitic complex, comprises leucocratic feldspathoid (nepheline, sodalite or vishnevite) syenites. A distinctive feature of these rocks is the poikilitic texture when feldspar laths contain numerous inclusions of feldspathoids. Rocks of the Poikilitic complex form lenses, or irregularly shaped bodies, which are located in both the Layered and Eudialyte complexes.

A large number of roof xenoliths of Devonian volcanoclastic rocks, both unaltered and intensely metasomatised, are found among the rocks of the Layered and Eudialyte complexes (Gerasimovsky et al., Reference Gerasimovsky, Volkov, Kogarko, Polyakov, Saprykina and Balashov1966; Korchak et al., Reference Korchak, Men'shikov, Pakhomovsky, Yakovenchuk and Ivanyuk2011). The unaltered xenoliths are composed of olivine basalt, basalt tuff, tuffite and sandstone. Under the influence of solutions sourced from alkaline magma, these rocks were metasomatically altered towards an alkali-syenitic composition.

The Lovozero massif is widely known for its unique mineral diversity as it represents a type locality for 110 minerals; in total, there are 412 valid mineral species there (https://www.mindat.org/loc–2697.html, Page updated: March 10, 2024). The maximal mineral diversity, including rare and endemic species, is typical of pegmatites and hydrothermal veins (Semenov, Reference Semenov1972; Pekov, Reference Pekov2000). However, as recent studies show, new and rare minerals can also be found in alkaline rocks: these are zolotarevite, sapozhnikovite and a number of minerals of the cancrinite group, e.g. kyanoxalite, hydroxycancrinite, cancrisilite and others.

Analytical methods

For this study, two samples of rocks from the Lovozero massif were selected. Sampling points are shown in Fig. 1a. Sample LV–152/4 was collected at the contact of xenolith of volcanoclastic rock and eudialyte lujavrite (Fig. 1b), and sample LV-02–1–3 is a fragment of poikilitic feldspathoid syenite (Fig. 1d).

The mineral associations, their relationships and chemical composition were studied using a LEO–1450 SEM equipped with an AZtec ULTIM MAX 100 EDS system (OXFORD instruments).

The mineral composition was also determined by an electron microprobe at the Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre, Apatity, using a Cameca MS–46 microprobe at an accelerating voltage of 22 kV and a probe current of 30–40 nA. Quantitative point analyses were made with a defocused (10–15 μm) beam. The following standards were used: wollastonite (SiKα and CaKα), hematite (FeKα), lorenzenite (NaKα and TiKα), pyrope (MgKα and AlKα), MnCO3 (MnKα), metallic NbLα, ZrSiO4 (ZrLα), SrSO4 (SrLα), (La,Ce)S (LaLα), CeS (CeLα), LiNd(MoO4)2 (NdLα), wadeite (KKα), sphalerite (ZnKα) and thorite (ThLα). The fluorine (Kα) content was measured by EDS with the AZtec ULTIM MAX 100 using the fluorapatite pre-analysed by wavelength dispersive spectroscopy from Cameca MS–46 as standard (Table 2).

Table 2. Chemical composition and unit formula of bortolanite and rosenbuschite from the Lovozero massive (Kola Peninsula, Russia) and bortolanite from the type locality (TL) (Day et al., Reference Day, Sokolova, Hawthorne, Horváth and Pfenninger-Horváth2022).

* The water content in the form of (OH)-groups is calculated from the charge balance and for the full occupancy of anionic positions; n.d. – not detected.

For a single-crystal study, a fragment of a bortolanite crystal with a size of 0.17 × 0.13 × 0.08 mm was cut from a segment of the thin section LV–152/4 shown in Fig. 2b. A single-crystal X-ray diffraction study of this fragment was performed using a Rigaku XtaLAB Synergy-S diffractometer (MoKα radiation, 293 K) with a microfocus X-ray source PhotonJet-S and a high-speed hybrid photon counting detector HyPix–6000HE at the X-Ray diffraction Centre of St. Petersburg State University. The CrysAlisPro software was used for data processing (CRYSALISPRO, 2015). The absorption correction was introduced using the SCALE3 ABSPACK algorithm. The structures have been solved and refined using the ShelX program package (Sheldrick, Reference Sheldrick2015) within the Olex2 shell (Dolomanov et al., Reference Dolomanov, Bourhis, Gildea, Howard and Puschmann2009). The crystal data and structure refinement details are given in Table 3; atom coordinates and displacement parameters are in Tables 4 and 5. The selected interatomic distances and bond-valence values are shown in Table 6 and Table 7 respectively. Site occupancy and refined site-scattering data are shown in Table 8. The crystallographic information file has been deposited with the Principal Editor of Mineralogical Magazine and is available as Supplementary material (see below). Upon the completion of this study, a polished sample was prepared from the above fragment and its chemical composition was determined (an. 1252 and 1253 in Table 2).

Figure 2. Morphology of bortolanite from the contact zone of volcanoclastic xenolith with eudialyte lujavrite, Kuamdespakhk Mt, Lovozero massif, sample LV–152/4; BSE image; (а) aggregates with a mesh structure, (b,c) detailed BSE image of Fig. 2a. (d) Symplectitic accretions of the bortolanite–phlogopite–ferri-katophorite with euhedral contours; (e) detailed BSE image of Fig. 2d. Btln – bortolanite, Phl – phlogopite, Fktp – ferri-katophorite, Rbs – rosenbuschite, Fap – fluorapatite, Pyh – pyrrhotite, Msd-Ce – mosandrite-(Ce) and Thm-Ca – thomsonite-Ca.

Table 3. Crystal data and structure refinement of the Lovozero bortolanite.

Table 4. Atomic coordinates and equivalent isotropic displacement parameters (Å2) of the Lovozero bortolanite.

Table 5. Anisotropic displacement parameters (Å2) of the Lovozero bortolanite.

Table 6. Selected bond lengths of the Lovozero bortolanite (Å).

φ = O, F and OH.

Symmetry codes: (i) +x, –1+y, +z; (ii) 1–x, 1–y, 1–z; (iii) +x, +y, 1+z; (iv) +x, –1+y, 1+z; (v) 1+x, +y, +z; (vi) 1+x, 1+y, +z; (vii) 2–x, 1–y, 1–z; (viii) +x, +y, –1+z; (xi) –1+x, –1+y, +z; (x) 1–x, –y, 1–z; (xi) –1+x, +y, +z; (xii) –1+x, –1+y, –1+z; (xiii) 1–x, 1–y, –z; (xiv) –1+x, +y, –1+z

Table 7. Bond-valence values* for Lovozero bortolanite.

* Bond-valence values calculated on the basis of our crystallographic information file (CIF) using the ECoN21 program (Ilinca, Reference Ilinca2022).

Table 8. Site occupancy and site-scattering for the Lovozero bortolanite.

The Raman spectra of minerals were obtained using EnSpectr R532 and R785 spectrometers (Spectr-M, ISSP RAS, Chernogolovka, Russia) equipped with an Olympus BX–43 microscope at the Mining Institute KSC RAS. Raman spectra were excited using a 532 nm solid-state laser with an actual power of 18 mW and a 785 nm diode laser with an actual power of 150 mW under the 50× objective (NA 0.75). The spectra were obtained in the range of 160–4000 cm−1 at a resolution of 4–6 cm−1 to the 532 nm laser and in the range of 160–2850 cm–1 at a resolution of 7–9 cm–1 to the 785 nm laser at room temperature. To improve the signal-to-noise ratio, the number of acquisitions was set to 30. All spectra were processed using the algorithms implemented in the OriginPro 8.1 software package (Originlab Corporation, Northampton, MA, USA).

Bortolanite morphology and associations

The sample LV–152/4 mainly consists of phlogopite and ferri-katophorite. Accessory minerals are nepheline, natrolite, fluorapatite and pyrrhotite. Other minerals of the association are as follows: potassic-arfvedsonite, richterite, thomsonite-Ca, loparite-(Ce), titanite, perovskite, ilmenite, sphalerite, magnetite, pyrite, chalcopyrite, violarite, bartonite, rosenbuschite, mosandrite-(Ce), rhabdophane-(Ce) and fluorite.

Bortolanite is represented by two types of aggregates. The first type is as aggregates of a reticulated (sometimes closer to a layered one due to phlogopite plates) structure without definite boundaries in the mass of hornfels (Fig. 2a); the size of aggregates reaches ~2.5 mm. In the centre, where there is the most continuous and even sections of aggregates, bortolanite has a pronounced block structure with a block size of 20–50 μm, in combination with noticeable compositional heterogeneity (Fig. 2b). At the boundary with the amphibole–phlogopite mass there are areas with an increased content of REEs, up to mosandrite-(Ce), in back-scattered electron (BSE) images these areas have a lighter shade (Fig. 2а). Areas with a mesh structure often contain clusters of rosenbuschite grains with a size of ~5–20 μm, which is very close to bortolanite in chemical composition, but with clear boundaries. Some clusters have an increased content of Nb, in this case they have a lighter shade in BSE and become clearly visible against the background of bortolanite (Fig. 2c).

The second type includes symplectitic accretions of bortolanite–phlogopite–ferri-katophorite with clear idiomorphic contours of the primary mineral replaced by them. This variety of bortolanite (Fig. 2d,e) occurs, unlike the first one, somewhat removed from the contact of rocks.

In the sample LV-02–1–3 bortolanite also occurs in association with potassic feldspar, nepheline, sodalite, natrolite, aegirine, aegirine–augite, loparite-(Ce), titanite, fluorcaphite, phlogopite, ferri-katophorite, rosenbuschite, fluorapatite, pyrrhotite, mosandrite-(Ce), ilmenite, sphalerite, magnetite, hematite, tausonite, pyrophanite, zircon, vishnevite and pyrochlore-group minerals. The mineral is often located in the feldspar matrix (Fig. 3a); sometimes it also comes into contact with nepheline or is surrounded by a nepheline rim. Figure 3c shows a wide nepheline border impregnated with aegirine. Phase heterogeneity is manifested in the largest grains, up to 1 mm in size, with an irregular shape and uneven boundaries (see BSE images in Fig. 3a,c). The lighter and more homogeneous (pristine-looking with smooth surface) areas correspond to the bortolanite, whereas the darker altered patches are characterised by a deficit of total sum obtained by electron microprobe analysis (EMPA), greater heterogeneity, and spots of high Nb content (Fig. 3b).

Figure 3. Morphology of bortolanite from the poikilitic feldspathoid syenites, Sengischorr Mt, Lovozero massif, sample LV-02–1–3; BSE image: (а) bortolanite intergrowths with titanite and fluorcaphite; (b) detailed BSE image of Fig. 3a; (c) aegirine–nepheline crowns around the bortolanite; (d) well-shaped bortolanite grains in potassic feldspar in intergrowths with aegirine. Btln – bortolanite, Kfs – potassic feldspar, Nph – nepheline, Aeg – aegirine, Ttn – titanite, Fcp – fluorcaphite, Vhn – vishnevite, Zrn – zircon, Pcl – pyrochlore-group minerals and Ilm – ilmenite.

Sometimes these grains intergrow with titanite and fluorcaphite (Fig. 3a). Bortolanite from the syenites typically contains zircon inclusions (Fig. 3b); inclusions of the pyrochlore-group minerals are also occasionally found. Another form of bortolanite is represented in the poikilitic feldspathoid syenites by 10–20 μm inclusions in aegirine or aegirine–augite. There are also inclusions of titanite, rosenbuschite and zircon along with bortolanite. The size of such inclusions sometimes reaches 100 μm and these are well-formed grains (Fig. 3c). It is interesting that rosenbuschite is also present in the poikilitic feldspathoid syenites, and in greater abundance than bortolanite. Unlike the xenoliths, however, these rocks consistently exhibit spatial separation of the two very similar mineral species.

Bortolanite chemical composition

The composition of the Lovozero bortolanite from both types of rocks is close to that of the Brazilian one (Table 2), but differs in a slightly lower REE and F content. The slight differences in the content of minor elements are obviously related to the geochemical environment. Thus, the Brazilian bortolanite contains Y and Hf as impurities whereas the Lovozero bortolanite from the contact zone of xenoliths includes Mg, Zn and Th and that from the feldspathoid syenites – K and Sr.

The total sum of the EMPA of Lovozero bortolanite from both types of rocks, as well as the sum for Brazilian bortolanite, has some deficiencies, but in our case this deficiency is greater. The authors describing the Brazilian bortolanite (Day et al., Reference Day, Sokolova, Hawthorne, Horváth and Pfenninger-Horváth2022) did not measure water directly, and ignored it in the calculations, having explained that this is due to the crystal chemistry of the rinkite group: “Sokolova (Sokolova, Reference Sokolova2006) pointed out that in Group I [later renamed the rinkite group by Sokolova and Cámara (Reference Sokolova and Cámara2017)], the monovalent anion at the XOA and XOM sites is invariably F, as there is insufficient space to accommodate OH and its corresponding hydrogen bond. This conclusion is valid for structures in which all cation sites are fully occupied. However, OH and H2O groups can occur at the XOA and XOM sites in a structure where cation sites are partly occupied; cf. batievaite-(Y), a rinkite-group mineral (Lyalina et al., Reference Lyalina, Zolotarev, Selivanova, Savchenko, Krivovichev, Mikhailova, Kadyrova and Zozulya2016; Table 1). In bortolanite, all cation sites are fully occupied, hence there is no possibility for OH and H2O groups to occur at the XOA and XOM sites.” As a result, in the empirical formula of Brazilian bortolanite based on O+F=18 the Si atoms per formula unit (apfu) is 4.07, which is 1.75% higher than full occupancy of 4.0 apfu.

In our study, we were also unable to measure water due to the scarce amount of available material, but the presence of water was confirmed by the Raman data.

The empirical formula calculated on the basis of 4 (Si+Al) apfu, taking into account the requirements for the charge balance and full occupancy of anionic positions, is as follows: Ca4.20Na2.075Ti0.775Zr0.69Th0.005Nb0.045Mg0.045Fe0.035Mn0.03REE 0.02Zn0.01Si4.00O14.87F2.21(OH)0.92 for samples with a refined crystal structure, average of analysis 1252 and 1253 (Table 2).

We also recalculated the data for bortolanite from the type locality in the same way (Table 2, last column). The new total sum is closer to 100%, which suggests that this method of calculation is better suited in this case, at least until there is evidence of the complete absence of water in the Brazilian mineral.

In both types of geological environments, the contact zone of xenoliths and feldspathoid syenite of the Lovozero massif, bortolanite is associated with rosenbuschite, sometimes contacting with the latter in aggregates (Fig. 2c). These minerals are very similar in chemistry (Table 1), but their grains in aggregates are separated by clear phase boundaries. We have included the rosenbuschite composition in Table 2 to show very small differences between these two mineral species. The expected quantitative differences can be described by the scheme resulting from the formulas of their end-members: 3Ca + Ti → 2Zr + 2Na. That's what we observe in reality (Fig. 4). An interesting qualitative difference lies in the constant presence of REEs in bortolanite in comparison to their complete absence in rosenbuschite.

Figure 4. Concentration of Na+Zr versus that of Ca+Ti showing the compositional range of the specimens investigated. 1 – rosenbuschite, Lovozero massif, our data; 2 – rosenbuschite, Lovozero massif (Semenov, Reference Semenov1972); 3 – bortolanite, Lovozero massif, our data; 4 – bortolanite, type locality (Day et al., Reference Day, Sokolova, Hawthorne, Horváth and Pfenninger-Horváth2022).

Raman spectroscopy

The spectra of bortolanite from the Lovozero massif, sample LV–152/4 (Fig. 5a) show some common features with the spectra of minerals close to it in chemical composition: götzenite from the same rinkite group (Sharygin et al., Reference Sharygin, Stoppa and Kolesov1996, Lafuente et al., Reference Lafuente, Downs, Yang, Stone, Armbruster, Danisi and De Gruyter2015) and wöhlerite (Lafuente et al., Reference Lafuente, Downs, Yang, Stone, Armbruster, Danisi and De Gruyter2015) from the wöhlerite group (Fig. 5b,c). In the bortolanite Raman spectra, the most intense band at 750–910 cm–1 is attributed to symmetric stretching of apical Si–O bonds and symmetric vibrations of the Si–O–Si bridge. The weaker group of bands at 910–1100 cm–1 is associated with other internal tetrahedral modes and the band at 1058 cm–1 corresponds to the antisymmetric mode of the Si–O–Si bridge. The intense bands at 600–700 cm–1 and 400–600 cm–1 are mixed. The range at 600–700 cm–1 correspond to bending vibrations in Si2O7 and Ti(Nb)–O stretching vibrations and probably chemical bond vibrations formed by the O, F and OH anions. The range at 400–600 cm–1 most likely correspond to bending vibrations in Si–O–Si and stretching vibrations in Zr–O. A group of bands in the low-frequency region of 200–400 cm–1 is assigned to libration and translation of the Si2O7 dimers as well as stretching vibrations of Na–O and Ca–O. In the 3300–3600 cm–1 range, there was a broad band centred at 3403 cm–1 with two shoulders at 3486 and 3525 cm–1. According to the literature data, bands between 3000 and 3700 cm–1 in minerals correspond to the O–H bonds stretching (Larkin, Reference Larkin2011; Frezzotti et al., Reference Frezzotti, Tecce and Casagli2012; Chukanov and Vigasina, Reference Chukanov and Vigasina2020). On the Raman spectra of lamprophyllite-group minerals belonging to the seidozerite supergroup like bortolanite, it was shown that in the region 3400–3800 cm–1 the OH group and H2O stretching vibrations are present (Andrade et al., Reference Andrade, Yang, Downs, Färber, Filho, Evans, Loehn and Schumer2018; Aksenov et al., Reference Aksenov, Ryanskaya, Shchapova, Chukanov, Vladykin, Votyakov and Rastsvetaeva2021).

Figure 5. (a) Raman spectrum of bortolanite with 532 nm laser excitation; (b) its comparison with wöhlerite and götzenite (Lafuente et al., Reference Lafuente, Downs, Yang, Stone, Armbruster, Danisi and De Gruyter2015) with 532 nm laser excitation and (c) 780/785 nm laser excitation.

In the 785 nm laser excitation Raman spectrum three broad bands of 376 cm–1, 432 cm–1 and 825 cm–1 were observed (Fig. 5c).

The stretching frequency v of the O–H bond obtained by Raman spectroscopy may be used for bond strength evaluation (Emsley, Reference Emsley1980; Libowitzky, Reference Libowitzky1999). Molecules of H2O exhibit rather long H bonds and high frequencies, whereas OH-groups are distributed from very strong to very weak H bonds and from very low to very high stretching frequencies. Very strong H bonds are observed at frequencies below 1600 cm–1 and at d(O‧‧‧O) <2.50 Å, strong H bonds are characterised by frequencies between 1600 and 3200 cm–1 and O‧‧‧O distances between 2.50 and 2.70 Å, and weak H bonds occur above 3200 cm–1 (up to ~3700 cm–1) and at d(O‧‧‧O) > 2.70 Å (with a barely defined upper limit beyond 3 Å) (Emsley, Reference Emsley1980). In bortolanite from the Lovozero massif, the distances XOM‧‧‧O6 = 2.785 Å, XOM‧‧‧O7 = 2.793 Å, XOM‧‧‧O7 = 2.873 Å, XOM‧‧‧O6 = 2.879 Å (<3 Å, see also Supplementary Figure) and modes in the spectral region 3400–3600 cm–1 are in a quite good agreement with those obtained from the distance-frequency correlation (Libowitzky, Reference Libowitzky1999) and indicate the presence of weak H bonds in the mineral. Minor differences between these values may be due to a significant deviation of the O‧‧‧H–O angle from 180 degrees.

Crystal structure

The mineral investigated by us in this study is a variety of the recently discovered bortolanite (Day et al., Reference Day, Sokolova, Hawthorne, Horváth and Pfenninger-Horváth2022), which belongs to the rinkite group of the seidozerite supergroup (Sokolova and Cámara, Reference Sokolova and Cámara2017). The crystal structure of this supergroup minerals consists of so-called HOH blocks (or sheets) that is typical of heterophyllosilicates (Ferraris and Gula, Reference Ferraris and Gula2005; Ferraris, Reference Ferraris2008) or, in other words, of minerals with TS (Titanium-Silicate) blocks (Sokolova, Reference Sokolova2006; Sokolova and Cámara, Reference Sokolova and Cámara2017).

The H (heteropolyhedral) layer is formed by MH and AP polyhedra linked to Si2O7 groups. The MHO6 and APO6 polyhedra share edges to form double chains parallel to the c axis and linked by the Si2O7 groups (Fig. 6a). In bortolanite there is a significant amount of Zr in the MH site. The MH site is an octahedron occupied by Ca and Zr with the 0.70:0.30 ratio, respectively (Table 8). The average <MH–φ> bond length is 2.289 Å (φ = O, F and OH). The AP site has coordination number (CN) equal to 7 and is almost fully occupied by Ca (with a small amount of REEs). The average <AP–φ> bond length is 2.478 Å.

Figure 6. The crystal structure of the Lovozero bortolanite: (a) the H layer: MH and AP polyhedra linked with Si2O7 groups; (b) the O layer: two columns extending along the c axis: one column of MO3 octahedra, the second of alternating polyhedra MO2 and MO1; (c) general view of the crystal structure, projection along the axis b. Drawn using Vesta (Momma and Izumi, Reference Momma and Izumi2011).

The O (octahedral) layer is formed by polyhedra centred by the MO3, MO2 and MO1 cations. This layer can be considered as consisting of two columns that extend along the c axis (Fig. 6b).

One column is formed by the MO3O6 octahedra and the other is composed of alternating MO2 and MO1 polyhedra. The MO3 octahedra are occupied by Na and Ca with a 0.68:0.28 ratio respectively (and a small amount of Mn and Zn). The average <MO3–φ> bond length is 2.366 Å. The MO2 position (CN 8) is occupied by Na0.72Ca0.28 (see Table 8) with an average <MO2–φ> bond length of 2.470 Å. Ti (with a small amount of Zr, Nb, Mg and Fe) are concentrated in the MO1 site with an average <MO1–φ> bond length of 2.001 Å. In contrast to the holotype sample of bortolanite (Day et al., Reference Day, Sokolova, Hawthorne, Horváth and Pfenninger-Horváth2022), in our case there is practically no distortion of this octahedral MO1 position (Table 6).

The anisotropic displacement parameters of the MO1 site is lightly elongated along the XOM–MO1–XOM bond direction, and it is possible to split this site (with approximate coordinates of additional site –0.012162, 0.025506, –0.003373), but the ‘main’ peak will still remain at the centre of the inversion (0, 0, 0). The splitting site will be at a distance of ~0.20 Å from it. Thus we do not observe complete displacement of the MO1 site as reported by Day et al. (Reference Day, Sokolova, Hawthorne, Horváth and Pfenninger-Horváth2022). Differences in the character of disordering may still be related to the occupancy of the MO1 and XOM sites itself, which is different in the two samples. The XOM site is a mixed O–OH–F anion position with a 0.435:0.46:0.105 ratio, respectively (The scheme of the local environment of the XOM site is shown in the Supplementary Figure). One more additional anion position XOA is fully occupied by F.

A combination of single-crystal X-ray diffraction and electron microprobe data provides the following empirical formula:

$$\eqalign{&{}_{}^{{\rm A}^{\rm P}} ( {\rm C}{\rm a}_{1.97}{\rm C}{\rm e}_{0.01}{\rm N}{\rm d}_{0.01}{\rm T}{\rm h}_{0.01}) _{{\rm \Sigma }2}{\boldsymbol \;}{}_{}^{{\rm M}^{\rm H}} ( {\rm C}{\rm a}_{1.39}{\rm Z}{\rm r}_{0.61}) _{{\rm \Sigma }2} \cr &{}_{}^{{\rm M}_1^{\rm O} } ( {\rm T}{\rm i}_{0.78}{\rm Z}{\rm r}_{0.08}{\rm N}{\rm b}_{0.05}{\rm M}{\rm g}_{0.05}{\rm F}{\rm e}_{0.04}) _{{\rm \Sigma }1} {}^{{\rm M}_2^{\rm O} } ( {\rm N}{\rm a}_{0.72}{\rm C}{\rm a}_{0.28}) _{{\rm \Sigma }1} \cr &{}_{}^{{\rm M}_3^{\rm O} } ( {\rm N}{\rm a}_{1.36}{\rm C}{\rm a}_{0.56}{\rm M}{\rm n}_{0.03}{\rm Z}{\rm n}_{0.01}) _{{\rm \Sigma }1.96} ( {\rm S}{\rm i}_2{\rm O}_7) _2\cr&{}_{}^{{\rm X}_{\rm M}^{\rm O} } ( ( {{\rm OH}} ) _{0.92}{\rm O}_{0.87}{\rm F}_{0.21}) _{{\rm \Sigma }2{\rm \;}}{}_{}^{{\rm X}_{\rm A}^{\rm O} } {\rm F}_2}$$

Discussion

Bortolanite, a rinkite-group mineral, was discovered in 2022 at the Bortolan Quarry in the Poços de Caldas alkaline massif, Minas Gerais, Brazil. This mineral was found in the nepheline syenite in close intergrowths with götzenite and in association with nepheline, alkali feldspar, aegirine, natrolite, analcime and manganoan pectolite (Day et al., Reference Day, Sokolova, Hawthorne, Horváth and Pfenninger-Horváth2022). The simplified formula based on 18 (O + F) apfu is as follows: Ca2(Ca,Zr)2Na(Na,Ca)2Ti(Si2O7)2(O,F)2F2. The crystal-chemical formula of the bortolanite from the Lovozero massif is as follows: (Ca1.97Ce0.01Nd0.01Th0.01)Σ2(Ca1.39Zr0.61)Σ2(Na0.72Ca0.28)Σ1(Na1.36Ca0.56Mn0.03Zn0.01)Σ1.96(Ti0.78Zr0.08Nb0.05Mg0.05Fe0.04)Σ1Si4O14((OH)0.92O0.87F0.21)Σ2F2, ideally Ca2(Ca1.5Zr0.5)Na(NaCa)Ti(Si2O7)2(O,OH)F2. The Lovozero bortolanite has the following differences from the holotype:

  1. (1) The presence of (OH) groups and their predominance over F in the XOM site. Thus, bortolanite from the Lovozero massif is essentially a separate (OH)-dominant mineral species; however, it is impossible to approve this status until enough material has been found for the quantitative determination of water.

  2. (2) Some difference in electron density between the MH and AP positions compared to the same values for the Brazilian sample. It is associated with a higher content of Zr (MH) and a lower content of REEs (AP).

  3. (3) For some Lovozero samples, a certain deficiency in the sum of analyses persists after the charge balancing (Table 2). Some of the cations may be thought to be replaced by water molecules, which is typical of such cation-deficient species of the rinkite group as mosandrite-(Ce) and batievaite-(Ce).

There are still some discrepancies between the analytical data for chemical composition and the structural model. The XOM position is tetrahedral, and in order to place (OH) groups instead of F in it according to the structural model, vacancies in MO3 are necessary. There are only 0.04 vacancies in the MO3 site, which is much less than the number of prospective (OH) groups of 0.92. This problem seems to be unsolvable within this study. The development of research on rinkite-group minerals, including minerals from the Lovozero massif, should help clarify the situation.

In the Lovozero massif, bortolanite, as well as other Ca-bearing rinkite-group minerals, were found in two rock types. The first type is the contact of alkaline rocks with roof xenoliths (Figs 1b,c, 2) or country rocks, and the second one is represented by poikilitic feldspathoid syenites (Figs 1d,e, 3).

The main reason for such localisation of bortolanite, rinkite-(Ce) and rosenbuschite is a low calcium content and a high Na/Ca ratio in the alkaline rocks of the Lovozero massif. According to Gerasimovsky et al. (Reference Gerasimovsky, Volkov, Kogarko, Polyakov, Saprykina and Balashov1966), the average Na/Ca ratio in the nepheline syenites of the Lovozero massif is 9.39 while that in nepheline syenites elsewhere is 3.66. As a result, calcium minerals are rare in the alkaline rocks of the Lovozero massif (Semenov, Reference Semenov1972; Pekov, Reference Pekov2000), and calcium is incorporated in rock-forming sodium minerals (e.g. aegirine, magnesio-arfvedsonite and nepheline) as an impurity. Crystallization of calcium minerals in the Lovozero massif is possible (1) during metasomatism of calcium-enriched rocks or (2) in highly evolved rocks as a result of the accumulation of calcium in the melt. The roof xenoliths of the Lovozero massif are composed of basalt, basalt tuffs and tuffites and contain up to 15 wt.% CaO (Korchak et al., Reference Korchak, Men'shikov, Pakhomovsky, Yakovenchuk and Ivanyuk2011). Under the influence of alkaline melts, a reaction rim composed of Na–Ca amphibole (ferri-katophorite), phlogopite, rosenbuschite and bortolanite formed around the xenoliths.

Vlasov and colleagues (Vlasov et al., Reference Vlasov, Kuzmenko and Eskova1966) stated that poikilitic feldspathoid syenites represented a pegmatoid stage in the evolution of the Lovozero massif having been formed as a result of crystallisation of a highly evolved melt enriched in volatile components and rare elements. Even though poikilitic rocks in the Lovozero massif are not widespread (5% of the massif volume), most of the rare-metal pegmatites are confined to these rocks. Pegmatites that associate with poikilitic rocks are characterised by the greatest variety of lithium, beryllium and rare-earth minerals. Poikilitic feldspathoid syenites contain various calcium minerals, such as Na–Ca amphiboles, titanite and apatite-supergroup minerals. It is likely that calcium accumulated gradually as the earliest sodium-rich rocks of the massif crystallised, and it became possible for calcium minerals, including bortolanite, to crystallise in poikilitic feldspathoid syenites.

The chemical composition of bortolanite contains fingerprints of the mineral-forming environment. Among the rocks of the massif, poikilitic syenites contain the highest concentrations of strontium and are enriched in potassium; bortolanite from these rocks contains Sr and K impurities. Magnesium and Zn impurities in bortolanite from the reaction rims between xenoliths and alkaline rocks are apparently caused by the enrichment of volcanoclastic rocks with magnesian minerals.

It is noteworthy that there are REEs in bortolanite, but rosenbuschite from the same rocks contain no rare earths (Table 2). Although, the Lovozero rosenbuschite (Semenov, Reference Semenov1972), found in the “leucocratic nepheline syenite formed by changing the phonolite porphyry xenolith on the contact with apatite-titanite foyaite in association with amphibole, apatite, magnetite and lovenite”, contains 2.05 wt.% REEs (this rosenbuschite composition is plotted in Fig. 3). Consequently, the REE content as such is not a characteristic feature of bortolanite, but in cases where both phases, bortolanite and rosenbuschite, are formed as, for example, in the Lovozero rocks, the phase with a higher calcium content, i.e. bortolanite, becomes preferable for REEs.

The isomorphism of bortolanite with rosenbuschite is clearly defined, especially with respect to the Lovozero samples. The Brazilian composition deviates slightly from the trend line due to the relatively low zirconium content (Fig. 3).

Acknowledgements

The X-ray diffraction studies were done at the Center for X-Ray Diffraction Studies of the Research Park of St. Petersburg State University. We also thank reviewers for important comments. This research was funded by Russian Science Foundation, project no. 24–27-00037.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1180/mgm.2024.36.

Competing interests

The authors declare none.

Footnotes

Associate Editor: Elena Zhitova

References

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Figure 0

Table 1. Ideal structural formulae for rinkite-group minerals.

Figure 1

Figure 1. Geological scheme of the Lovozero alkaline massif after (Saprykina et al., 1977), with simplifications (a) and sampling points. (b) Xenolith of volcanoclastic rock in eudialyte lujavrite (sampling point LV–152/4); (c) photo of a thin section of LV–152/4 in transmitted light; the white arrow shows the bortolanite location; (d) poikilitic feldspathoid syenite in eudialyte lujavrite (sampling point LV-02–1–3); (e) photo of sample LV-02–1–3; the red arrow shows the bortolanite location.

Figure 2

Table 2. Chemical composition and unit formula of bortolanite and rosenbuschite from the Lovozero massive (Kola Peninsula, Russia) and bortolanite from the type locality (TL) (Day et al., 2022).

Figure 3

Figure 2. Morphology of bortolanite from the contact zone of volcanoclastic xenolith with eudialyte lujavrite, Kuamdespakhk Mt, Lovozero massif, sample LV–152/4; BSE image; (а) aggregates with a mesh structure, (b,c) detailed BSE image of Fig. 2a. (d) Symplectitic accretions of the bortolanite–phlogopite–ferri-katophorite with euhedral contours; (e) detailed BSE image of Fig. 2d. Btln – bortolanite, Phl – phlogopite, Fktp – ferri-katophorite, Rbs – rosenbuschite, Fap – fluorapatite, Pyh – pyrrhotite, Msd-Ce – mosandrite-(Ce) and Thm-Ca – thomsonite-Ca.

Figure 4

Table 3. Crystal data and structure refinement of the Lovozero bortolanite.

Figure 5

Table 4. Atomic coordinates and equivalent isotropic displacement parameters (Å2) of the Lovozero bortolanite.

Figure 6

Table 5. Anisotropic displacement parameters (Å2) of the Lovozero bortolanite.

Figure 7

Table 6. Selected bond lengths of the Lovozero bortolanite (Å).

Figure 8

Table 7. Bond-valence values* for Lovozero bortolanite.

Figure 9

Table 8. Site occupancy and site-scattering for the Lovozero bortolanite.

Figure 10

Figure 3. Morphology of bortolanite from the poikilitic feldspathoid syenites, Sengischorr Mt, Lovozero massif, sample LV-02–1–3; BSE image: (а) bortolanite intergrowths with titanite and fluorcaphite; (b) detailed BSE image of Fig. 3a; (c) aegirine–nepheline crowns around the bortolanite; (d) well-shaped bortolanite grains in potassic feldspar in intergrowths with aegirine. Btln – bortolanite, Kfs – potassic feldspar, Nph – nepheline, Aeg – aegirine, Ttn – titanite, Fcp – fluorcaphite, Vhn – vishnevite, Zrn – zircon, Pcl – pyrochlore-group minerals and Ilm – ilmenite.

Figure 11

Figure 4. Concentration of Na+Zr versus that of Ca+Ti showing the compositional range of the specimens investigated. 1 – rosenbuschite, Lovozero massif, our data; 2 – rosenbuschite, Lovozero massif (Semenov, 1972); 3 – bortolanite, Lovozero massif, our data; 4 – bortolanite, type locality (Day et al., 2022).

Figure 12

Figure 5. (a) Raman spectrum of bortolanite with 532 nm laser excitation; (b) its comparison with wöhlerite and götzenite (Lafuente et al., 2015) with 532 nm laser excitation and (c) 780/785 nm laser excitation.

Figure 13

Figure 6. The crystal structure of the Lovozero bortolanite: (a) the H layer: MH and AP polyhedra linked with Si2O7 groups; (b) the O layer: two columns extending along the c axis: one column of MO3 octahedra, the second of alternating polyhedra MO2 and MO1; (c) general view of the crystal structure, projection along the axis b. Drawn using Vesta (Momma and Izumi, 2011).

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