Stuart
J. Mills1, Anthony R.
Kampf2,
Andrew G. Christy3, Robert M. Housley4,
George R. Rossman4,
Robert E. Reynolds5 and
1Geosciences,
Museum Victoria, GPO Box 666,
Melbourne 3001, Victoria, Australia
2Mineral
Sciences Department, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, 900
Exposition Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90007, USA
3Centre
for Advanced Microscopy,
Australian National
University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
4Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences,
California Institute of
Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
5220
South Buena Vista Street, Redlands, CA 92373, USA
65199 E. Silver Oak Road, Salt Lake City, UT
84108, USA
ABSTRACT
Bluebellite, Cu6[I5+O3(OH)3](OH)7Cl,
and mojaveite, Cu6[Te6+O4(OH)2](OH)7Cl,
are new secondary copper
minerals from the Mojave Desert. The type locality for bluebellite is
the D
shaft, Blue
Bell claims, near Baker, San Bernardino
County, California, while cotype localities for mojaveite are the E pit
at Blue
Bell claims and also the Birds Nest drift, Otto Mountain, also near
Baker. The
two minerals are very similar in their properties. Bluebellite is
associated
particularly with murdochite, but also with calcite,
fluorite, hemimorphite and rarely dioptase in
a highly siliceous hornfels.
It forms
bright bluish-green plates or flakes up to about
20 × 20 × 5 µm in size that are usually curved. The streak is pale bluish green and the lustre is
adamantine, but
often appears dull because of surface roughness. It is non-fluorescent.
Bluebellite is very soft (Mohs hardness ≈ 1), sectile, has perfect cleavage on {001} and an
irregular fracture. The calculated density based
on the empirical formula is 4.746 g cm-3.
Bluebellite is uniaxial
(‒), with mean refractive index estimated as 1.96 from the
Gladstone-Dale
relationship. It is pleochroic O
(bluish green) >> E
(nearly
colourless). Electron microprobe analyses gave the empirical formula Cu5.82I0.99Al0.02Si0.12O3.11(OH)9.80Cl1.09
based on 14 (O+Cl) pfu. The Raman
spectrum shows strong
iodate-related bands at 680, 611 and 254 cm-1. Bluebellite
is trigonal,
space group R3, with the unit cell parameters: a
= 8.3017(5), c = 13.259(1) Å, V
= 791.4(1) Å3 and Z = 3. The
eight strongest lines in the
X-ray powder diffraction pattern are [dobs/Å
(I) (hkl)]:
4.427(99)(003), 2.664(35)(211), 2.516(100)(21-2), 2.213(9)(006),
2.103(29)(033,214), 1.899(47)(312,21-5), 1.566(48)(140,217) and
1.479(29)(045,14-3,324).