A new article in wikipedia has been created for basaluminite, including the information relative to its descreditation in favour of felsobanyaite.
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Basaluminite is a hydrated aluminium sulphate, with ideal
formula of Al4(SO4)(OH)10·5H2O. The
mineral name has been discredited (Burke, 2006) by the Commission on New
Minerals and Mineral Names (CNMMN) of the International Mineralogical Association
(IMA) in favour of the name of Felsobanyaite.
It is a white, yellow, orange or brown mineral of low
crystallinity. This mineral was first described by Bannister & Hollingsworth
(1948) and it seems to form after the dehydration, even on air-drying, of the highly
hydrated Hydrobasaluminite (Al4(OH)10SO4·12-36H2O).
Further dehydration at 150ÂșCwould lead to the formation of Metabasaluminite (Al4(OH)10SO4;
Hollingsworth & Bannister, 1950).
Typically it appears as a weathering product of clays, as
the result of acid released from the oxidation of pyrite; probably always a
dehydration product of hydrobasaluminite; as coatings on joint surfaces and
veinlets in ironstone (Irchester, England); in chalk (Clifton Hill, England); a
reaction rim surrounding carbonate concretions (Chickerell, England); on
fractures in garnet–sillimanite laterite (Kanogami, Japan) (http://www.handbookofmineralogy.com/pdfs/basaluminite.pdf).
Basaluminite has been
described as the dominant Al mineral formed when acid mine drainage is mixed
with circumneutral buffered pH waters (Clayton, 1980; Bigham and Nordstrom,
2000).
Reference list
- http://www.handbookofmineralogy.com/pdfs/basaluminite.pdf
- Bannister, F. A., & Hollingworth, S. E. (1948). Two new British minerals. Nature, 162, 565.
- Bigham J. M. and Nordstrom D. K. (2000) Iron and aluminium hydroxysulfates from acid sulfate waters. In Sulfate Minerals – Crystallography, Geochemistry and Environmental Significance. Mineralogical Society of America, Washington DC, USA, pp.351–403.
- Brydon J. E.; Singh S. Shah, 1969: The nature of the synthetic crystalline basic aluminum sulphates as compared with basaluminite. The Canadian Mineralogist 9, Part 5(Pages 644-654.
- Burke, E. A. (2006). A mass discreditation of GQN minerals. The Canadian Mineralogist, 44(6), 1557-1560.
- Clayton T. (1980) Hydrobasaluminite and basaluminite from Chickerell, Dorset. Mineral. Mag. 43, 931–937.
- Hollingworth, S. E. & Bannister, F. A. (1950): Basaluminite and hydrobasaluminite, two new minerals from Northamptonshire. Mineralogical Magazine, 29,1-17.
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