Kidwellite
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Kidwellite in an uncommon mineral that was discovered in Arkansas in the United States. It was approved by the
IMA IMA or Ima may refer to: Education * Indian Military Academy, Dehradun * Instituto Miguel Ángel, a school in Mexico City Galleries and museums * Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indiana, US * Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris, France * Islamic Mus ...
in 1974, but it was only named in 1978 by Moore and Ito after Albert Lewis (Laws) Kidwell.


Properties

Kidwellite usually has a botyroidal or acicular crystal habit. The luster of these spherical aggregates is usually matte and has a velvety surface. However, it can grow fibrous columnar crystals, although that form is much rarer. Because of the similarities in hardness, color, and crystal habit, it can be confused with the sodium analogue of meurigite. An easy way to differentiate the two is that meurigite-Na has a white streak, while kidwellite has a yellow one. The mineral does not display radioactive properties. Kidwellite mainly consists of oxygen (44.43%) and iron (36.73%) but otherwise consists of phosphorus (13.58%). It also has a small amount of copper (2.32%), sodium (1.68%) and hydrogen (1.25%). When originally described by Moore and Ito in 1978, the two researchers reported the mineral to crystallize in either ''A''2/''m'', ''Am'' or ''A''2
space group In mathematics, physics and chemistry, a space group is the symmetry group of a repeating pattern in space, usually in three dimensions. The elements of a space group (its symmetry operations) are the rigid transformations of the pattern that ...
, which was later found out to be incorrect, as demonstrated by the structure solution. According to one sample, it can be slightly arsenic bearing as well. The slightly arsenic samples were collected from the Clara Pit, Black Forest, Germany. This study was executed by the author of the journal, Uwe Kolitsch. He claimed the data to be similar to Walenta's results in 1990 executed on the samples from the same locality. The specimens obtained from Clara Pit bearing arsenic can be explained easily, as many arsenic bearing minerals can be found in the mine. Other impurities include aluminum and copper. Comparing his findings with Moore's and Ito's, the author suggested revising both the chemical formula and the symmetry. It was accepted by the IMA, as both the formula and the space group is now the same as what Kolitsch described in his findings.


Oriented intergrowths

Several authors reported kidwellite having
epitaxial Epitaxy (prefix ''epi-'' means "on top of”) is a type of crystal growth or material deposition in which new crystalline layers are formed with one or more well-defined orientations with respect to the crystalline seed layer. The deposited cry ...
intergrowths with iron phosphates. In the Rotläufchen mine, Germany, Dietrich found kidwellite needles on the face of hydrothermally altered rockbridgeite in 1978. Keller reported a similar finding from Namibia in 1985, where he discovered older rockbridgeites with oriented overgrowths of fibrous kidwellite on it. In 1995, Walenta described dufrénite crystals that grade into kidwellite at their tip. The aforementioned mineralogist – among Theye – in 2001, observed the fibrous kidwellite grading into laubmannite. The similarities between the structure of kidwellite and laubmannite, and other fibrous iron phosphates, explains the reported epitaxial intergrowths.{{Cite journal , last=Kolitsch , first=U. , date=February 2004 , title=The crystal structures of kidwellite and 'laubmannite', two complex fibrous iron phosphates , url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/mineralogical-magazine/article/abs/crystal-structures-of-kidwellite-and-laubmannite-two-complex-fibrous-iron-phosphates/029178412DF955FA84193D8546733B16 , journal=Mineralogical Magazine , language=en , volume=68 , issue=1 , pages=147–165 , doi=10.1180/0026461046810177 , bibcode=2004MinM...68..147K , s2cid=53137259 , issn=0026-461X, url-access=subscription


Discovery and locality

Kidwellite was described from
novaculite Novaculite, also called Arkansas Stone, is a microcrystalline to cryptocrystalline rock type that consists of silica in the form of chert or flint. It is commonly white to grey or black in color, with a specific gravity that ranges from 2.2 to 2. ...
deposits in Arkansas by Moore and Ito. Even though there are numerous occurrences of the mineral, kidwellite does not have mamy more studies on it other than the one made by the two aforementioned mineralogists. It is a late-stage or a
secondary mineral A primary mineral is any mineral formed during the original crystallization of the host Igneous rock, igneous Primary Rock, primary rock and includes the essential mineral(s) used to classify the rock along with any accessory minerals. In ore deposi ...
. It usually occurs in phosphate-bearing iron deposits, as a replacement of
beraunite Beraunite is an iron phosphate mineral. It was first described by August Breithaupt for an occurrence in Beraun currently in the Czech Republic. Beraunite occurs as a secondary mineral in iron ore deposits, and as an alteration product of primar ...
and rockbridgeite. Kidwellite can be found in Arkansas, US, in the Coon Creek mine and the Three Oak Gap in Polk County. It can also be found in Alabama, Brazil, Namibia, England, Germany, Australia, and a few more countries. It can be associated with rockbridgeite, beraunite,
strengite Strengite is a relatively rare iron phosphate mineral with the formula: FePO4·2H2O. The mineral is named after the German mineralogist (1830–1897). Lavender, pink or purple in hue, it is similar to variscite and is partially soluble, part ...
, cacoxenite, chalcosiderite, eleonorite, and dufrénite.


References

Monoclinic minerals Monoclinic crystals Phosphate minerals Iron minerals