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Cornubite is a rare secondary copper arsenate mineral with formula: Cu5(AsO4)2(OH)4. It was first described for its discovery in 1958 in Wheal Carpenter, Gwinear, Cornwall, England, UK.Claringbull, Hey and Davis, ''American Mineralogist'' (1959) 44: 1321 The name is from Cornubia, the medieval Latin name for Cornwall. It is a dimorph of Cornwallite, and the arsenic analogue of pseudomalachite.


Physical properties

Cleavage is distinct in two directions, both perpendicular to the enlarged faces of the tabular crystals, intersecting at about 70°. Cornubite is fairly soft, with hardness 4, the same as fluorite, and specific gravity 4.64, which is similar to another copper arsenate, clinoclase, at 4.38, but much denser than quartz, at 2.66.


Optical properties

All triclinic minerals are biaxial; cornubite is biaxial (-). Its refractive indices are quite high, close to 1.9, similar to zircon and garnet. It is green, as are many copper minerals, usually translucent, with a vitreous luster and a light green streak.


Unit cell

Cornubite belongs to the triclinic crystal class , space group P, meaning that it has a very low symmetry, with only a center of symmetry and no mirror planes or axes of symmetry. In 1984 Sieber, Hofmeister, Tillmans and Abraham reported new data from microprobe analysis of cornubite, which gave unit cell parameters a = 6.121 Å, b = 6.251 Å, c = 6.790 Å, α = 92.93°, β = 111.3°, γ = 107.47° and Z=1.American Mineralogist (1985)70: 1333


Structure

The structure is made up of sheets of edge-shared Cu(O,OH)6 octahedra, with a copper atom Cu in the middle of the octahedron and either oxygen O or hydroxyl OH at each of the six vertices. These sheets are connected together by AsO4 groups with an arsenic As atom in the middle and O at each of the four vertices. In the AsO4 groups three of the O's are shared with octahedra in one octahedral sheet, and the fourth O is shared with an octahedron in the adjacent sheet.
Hydrogen bonds In chemistry, a hydrogen bond (or H-bond) is a primarily electrostatic force of attraction between a hydrogen (H) atom which is covalently bound to a more electronegative "donor" atom or group (Dn), and another electronegative atom bearing a ...
also connect the sheets together.


Crystal habit

Crystals, which are very rare, are tabular, often in aggregates as rosettes. Cornubite is generally fibrous, botryoidal, globular or massive.


Environment

Cornubite is a secondary mineral found in the oxidised zone of copper deposits. In Cornwall it is found in
drusy In geology, druse refers to a coating of fine crystals on a rock fracture surface or vein or within a vug or geode. See also * Crystal habit * Miarolitic cavity Miarolitic cavities (or ''miarolitic texture'') are typically crystal-lined irregula ...
quartz associated with malachite, Cu2(CO3)(OH)2, olivenite, Cu2(AsO4)(OH), cuprite, Cu2O, cornwallite, Cu2+5(AsO4)2(OH)2, and liroconite, Cu2+2Al(AsO4)(OH)4·4H2O. Some of the world’s best specimens come from the Majuba Hill Mine in the Antelope District, Nevada, US. Cornubite occurs there as light green botryoidal crusts on
rhyolite Rhyolite ( ) is the most silica-rich of volcanic rocks. It is generally glassy or fine-grained (aphanitic) in texture, but may be porphyritic, containing larger mineral crystals (phenocrysts) in an otherwise fine-grained groundmass. The mineral ...
or as balls and crusts on cornwallite, also as coatings on clinoclase and
pseudomorphs In mineralogy, a pseudomorph is a mineral or mineral compound that appears in an atypical form (crystal system), resulting from a substitution process in which the appearance and dimensions remain constant, but the original mineral is replaced by ...
after parnauite.Castor and Ferdock (2004) Minerals of Nevada, Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology with the University of Nevada Press Other associations are with chalcophyllite, chenevixite, pseudomalachite, bayldonite,
tyrolite Tyrolite is a hydrated calcium copper arsenate carbonate mineral with formula: Ca Cu5( As O4)2 CO3(O H)4·6 H2O. Tyrolite forms glassy blue to green orthorhombic In crystallography, the orthorhombic crystal system is one of the 7 crystal sys ...
, azurite and chrysocolla.


Type locality

The
type locality Type locality may refer to: * Type locality (biology) * Type locality (geology) See also * Local (disambiguation) * Locality (disambiguation) {{disambiguation ...
is Wheal Carpenter, Gwinear, Cornwall, UK. The type material is conserved at the Natural History Museum, London, reference BM.1958,122


References

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External links

Jmol: http://rruff.geo.arizona.edu/AMS/viewJmol.php?id=13776 Arsenate minerals Copper(II) minerals Triclinic minerals Minerals in space group 2