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European Journal of Mineralogy; October 1999; v. 11; no. 5; p. 879-890
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Description and crystal structure of nabiasite, BaMn 9 [(V,As)O 4 ] 6 (OH) 2 , a new mineral from the Central Pyrenees (France)

Joel Brugger, Michel Bonin, Kurt J. Schenk, Nicolas Meisser, Peter Berlepsch, and Alain Ragu

Monash University, Department of Earth Sciences, Clayton, Victoria, Australia

Nabiasite, ideally BaMn 9 [(V,As)O 4 ] 6 (OH) 2 , is a new mineral which occurs in rhodochrosite-, friedelite- and barite-bearing veinlets crosscutting Mn ores at the historic Pla de Labasse deposit near the Nabias hamlet, Central Pyrenees, France. These syn-genetic exhalative ores are embedded in Lower Carboniferous Radiolarian cherts and have acquired a complex mineralogy during the Hercynian metamorphism which culminated under upper-green-schist-facies conditions. The fresh metamorphosed ores consist of rhodonite, rhodochrosite, friedelite, tephroite, spessartine, braunite, hausmannite, locally abundant tinzenite and pyroxmangite, + or -fluorapatite, strontian barite, hyalophane, rutile, and pyrophanite. Ba and V (+ or -As) have probably been enriched together with Mn by syn-genetic processes. Thus, nabiasite is a product of the hydrothermal remobilization of syn-genetic concentrations, possibly by fluids originating from late Hercynian granitic intrusions. Nabiasite is a rare mineral occurring as red anhedral grains up to 100 mu m in diameter. It is cubic with a = 12.832(2) Aa and space group Pa 3, Z = 4. Its structure has been determined and refined to R 1 = 0.0263 for 854 unique reflections with I > 2sigma (I), collected on a STOE IPDS using MoKalpha X-radiation. The structure of nabiasite contains two symmetry-independent Mn (super 2+) octahedrally coordinated by O, one Mn (super 2+) in octahedral coordination with five O and one OH group, one V (super 5+) in tetrahedral coordination with O, and one Ba (super 2+) in twelve-fold coordination with O. The structure is based on a cubic close-packed anionic framework, with close-packed planes parallel to (111). One of every nine close-packed positions in the plane passing through the origin is occupied by a Ba atom instead of a O atom. The structure of nabiasite can be described as a three-dimensional framework of edge-sharing MnO 6 -octahedra, with cavities which host Ba(VO 4 ) 6 groups.

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