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Abhurite SN O CL (OH) : Crystal Data

Abhurite is a tin hydroxychloride mineral that forms as thin hexagonal crystals or crusts. It is colorless with a white streak and opalescent luster. Abhurite is uniaxial and transparent. It was first discovered forming blister-like protuberances on a tin ingot recovered from a shipwreck in Sharm Abhur Cove, Saudi Arabia. Associated minerals include romarchite and kutnohorite. The mineral's crystal structure and chemical composition were later analyzed and it was named after the type locality in Saudi Arabia.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
45 views1 page

Abhurite SN O CL (OH) : Crystal Data

Abhurite is a tin hydroxychloride mineral that forms as thin hexagonal crystals or crusts. It is colorless with a white streak and opalescent luster. Abhurite is uniaxial and transparent. It was first discovered forming blister-like protuberances on a tin ingot recovered from a shipwreck in Sharm Abhur Cove, Saudi Arabia. Associated minerals include romarchite and kutnohorite. The mineral's crystal structure and chemical composition were later analyzed and it was named after the type locality in Saudi Arabia.

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Abhurite Sn2+

21 O6 Cl16 (OH)14

c 2001-2005 Mineral Data Publishing, version 1

Crystal Data: Hexagonal. Point Group: 3 2/m, 3m, or 32. As thin, six-sided crystals,
platy to tabular on (0001), showing {0115} and {0001}, to 2 mm; as cryptocrystalline crusts.
Twinning: On {0001}.

Physical Properties: Fracture: Hackly. Tenacity: Fragile [sic]. Hardness = 2


D(meas.) = 4.42 (synthetic). D(calc.) = 4.417

Optical Properties: Transparent. Color: Colorless. Streak: White. Luster: Opalescent.


Optical Class: Uniaxial (+). ω = 2.06  = ∼2.11 2V(meas.) = Small, observed on strained
plates.

Cell Data: Space Group: R3m, R3m, or R32. a = 10.0175(3) c = 44.014(2) Z=3

X-ray Powder Pattern: Sharm Abhur Cove, Saudi Arabia.


2.5313 (100), 2.8915 (70), 4.139 (50), 3.404 (50), 2.8175 (50), 3.271 (35), 3.244 (35)

Chemistry: (1) (2)


Sn 73.4 73.44
Cl 15.7 16.71
O 11.0 9.43
H 0.4 0.42
Total 100.5 100.00

(1) Sharm Abhur Cove, Saudi Arabia; Sn by wet chemical analysis, Cl by ion-specific electrode,
O by neutron activation, H by CHN analyzer. (2) Sn21 O6 Cl16 (OH)14 .

Occurrence: In blisterlike protuberances on the surface of a tin ingot recovered from a ship
wrecked possibly 100 years ago (Sharm Abhur cove, Saudi Arabia).

Association: Romarchite, kutnohorite, aragonite.

Distribution: From the cargo of a ship wrecked in a Red Sea cove known as Sharm Abhur,
about 30 km north of Jiddah, Saudi Arabia. From the cargo of a ship wrecked off Hidra, Norway.
From a ship wrecked about 30 km north-northwest of St. Ives, Cornwall, England.

Name: For the Saudi Arabian locality at Sharm Abhur Cove.

Type Material: Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada; National Museum of Natural
History, Washington, D.C., USA, 162403.

References: (1) Matzko, J.J., H.T. Evans, Jr., M.E. Mrose, and P. Aruscavage (1985)
Abhurite, a new tin hydroxychloride mineral, and a comparative study with a synthetic basic tin
chloride. Can. Mineral., 23, 233–240. (2) (1989) Amer. Mineral., 74, 500 (abs. ref. 1). (3) Von
Schnering, H.G., R. Nesper, and H. Pelshenke (1981) Sn21 Cl16 (OH)14 O6 , das sogenannte basische
Zinn(II)-chlorid. Zeits. Naturforsch., 36b, 1551–1560 (in German with English abs.). (4) Edwards,
R., R.D. Gillard, and P.A. Williams (1992) The stabilities of secondary tin minerals: abhurite and
its relationships to Sn(II) and Sn(IV) oxides and oxyhydroxides. Mineral. Mag., 56, 221–226.

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permission of Mineral Data Publishing.

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