American Mineralogist; May 2008; v. 93; no. 5-6;
p. 902-909; DOI: 10.2138/am.2008.2582
© 2008 Mineralogical Society of America
Rudashevskyite, the Fe-dominant analogue of sphalerite, a new mineral: Description and crystal structure
Sergey N. Britvin1,*,
Alla N. Bogdanova2,
Maya M. Boldyreva3 and
Galina Y. Aksenova4
1 Department of Crystallography, St. Petersburg State University, Universitetskaya Nab. 7/9, 199034 St. Petersburg, Russia
2 Geological Institute, Kola Science Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, Fersman Str. 21, 184200 Apatity, Russia
3 Department of Mineral Deposits, St. Petersburg State University, Universitetskaya Nab. 7/9, 199034 St. Petersburg, Russia
4 Mekhanobr-Engeneering Join-Stock Company, Vasilievsky ostrov, 21 line 2, 199026 St. Petersburg, Russia

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FIGURE 1. Xenomorphic grain of rudashevskyite (Rud) attached to large schreibersite grain (Schr), associated with troilite (Tr), idiomorphic roedderite tablets (Roed), and clinoenstatite (Px). Note abundant micro-patches of troilite along rudashevskyite rim. Reflected light.
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FIGURE 2. Foliated lamellar aggregate of rudashevskyite (Rud) with inclusions of troilite (Tr), associated with roedderite (Roed) and clinoenstatite (Px). Brighter lamellae are slightly enriched in Zn (~0.03 Zn apfu). Numbers correspond to analyses listed in Table 2 . BSE image.
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FIGURE 4. Reflectance spectrum of rudashevskyite measured in air, curve (1), in comparison with spectra of reference sphalerites: (2) 45 mol% FeS (Chvileva et al. 1988); (3) Sardis meteorite, (Zn0.60Fe0.35Mn0.06) = 1.01S0.99 (our data); (4) 23 mol% FeS (Criddle and Stanley 1993); (5) ZnS with 0.4 wt% Cd (Criddle and Stanley 1993); outer bottom scale in nanometers. Black circles represent reflectance values measured at 580 nm for above mentioned minerals and for pure sphalerite-type FeS (Murowchick and Barnes 1986); inner bottom scale in atoms per formula unit.
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FIGURE 5. Reconstruction of reciprocal space of rudashevskyite attributed (first domain) along [001], zero-layer. Note weak reflections to the second domain [220(2)].
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FIGURE 6. Reconstruction of reciprocal space of rudashevskyite (first domain) along [110], zero-layer. Note weak and smeared reflections attributed to the adjacent rudashevskyite domains, and sharp (110) reflections of embedded kamacite crystal (110 Kamacite).
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FIGURE 7. Schematic projections of the three rudashevskyite domains (displayed as tetrahedra) onto cube plane of embedded kamacite crystal.
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FIGURE 8. Chemical composition of natural Fe-dominant members of FeS-ZnS-MnS system. Scale in apfu (2 apfu total). References: [1] El Goresy (1967); [2] Buseck and Holdsworth (1972); [3] Weinke et al. (1977); [4] Rambaldi et al. (1986); [5] Peter and Scott (1988); [6] El Goresy and Ehlers (1989); [7] Ikeda (1989); [8] Kissin (1989); [9] Yaroshevsky et al. (1989); [10] Lin et al. (1991); [11] Zhang and Sears (1996); [12] Lin and Kimura (1997); [13] Petrichenko and Ulyanov (1998); [14] Lin and El Goresy (2002); [15] Glasby and Notsu (2003); [16] Mitchell and Belton (2004).
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Copyright © 2008 by Mineralogical Society of America