Abstract

During a reorganization of the mineralogical collection of Turin University, old samples of the so-called mohsite of Colomba were found. “Mohsite” was discredited in 1979 by Kelly et al., as a result of some analyses performed on the equivalent material coming from the French region of Hautes-Alpes, but the original samples found in similar geological setting in Italy were lost and never analysed with modern equipment. After more than a century, the rediscovered samples of Professor Colomba were analysed by means of SEM-EDS analysis, microRaman spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction. The results have demonstrated that the historical samples studied by Colomba are Pb-free dessauite-(Y), and pointed to an idealized crystal chemical formula (Sr0.70Na0.25Ca0.09)Σ=1.04 (Y0.62U0.18Yb0.09Sc0.08)Σ=0.97   (Ti12.66 )Σ=17.70O38 and unit-cell parameters a = 10.376(3) Å, c = 20.903(6) Å, and V = 1949(1) Å3.

1. Introduction

“Mohsite” was first cited in 1827 by Lévy [1] in rock samples from the Dauphiné region (France). The identification was obtained mainly on morphological evidence, but the original samples studied by Lévy were lost, and no other analysis could be made for a better identification.

In 1901, Lacroix [2] acquired some samples coming from Le Plate Muratouse, La Grave area, at the Department of Hautes-Alpes (Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur, France). Based only on the morphological features, very similar to those described by Lévy, and considering the close topographical occurrence, Lacroix identified these samples as “mohsite” and, since the old types were missing, the new samples became neotypes.

One year later, Colomba [3], at that time, Professor of Mineralogy at the Royal University and Director of the Mineralogical Museum of Turin (Piedmont, Italy), described morphologically similar small crystals coming from La Beaume, Oulx (Susa Valley, Piedmont, Italy) not so far from the French occurrence and in a comparable geological and mineralogical context (Colomba, [3]). Chemical qualitative analysis carried out by Colomba showed only the presence of TiO, CaO, FeO, and minor MgO. The data of Colomba were later summarized by Zambonini [4].

These samples (few millimetric size crystals) were lost in some drawer of the University Museum Warehouse and forgotten for about a century (Costa and Gallo, [5]). Kelly et al. [6] reported that they had obtained some of the samples of the Lacroix collection and gave additional data on them.

The analysis performed by Kelly showed the presence of Sr and minor Pb, but not calcium, so the mineral of Lacroix and Colomba was not the new Ca-rich member of the crichtonite supergroup, which was named loveringite by Gatehouse et al. [7]. These authors consequently stated that the name “mohsite” was incorrectly used for a member of the crichtonite-senaite series, they proposed to discredit the name “mohsite,” and IMA accepted the proposal.

In 2008, during the reorganization of the historical mineralogical collection of the University of Turin, Italy (now hosted in the Regional Museum of Natural History of the same town, MRSN hereinafter), some old wooden boxes were opened, and the original samples, together with the handwritten label of Colomba, at that time, Director of the Museum (who stored them with a label “manaccanite,” a Mg-rich variety of ilmenite), and the original catalogue number, M/U 13524, were newly found (Figure 1).

Two small crystals were analysed in the laboratory of the Department of Earth Science of the University of Turin and of the CrisDi (Interdepartmental Centre for the Research and Development of Crystallography, Turin, Italy) for the identification.

The analyses demonstrate that the old specimens are dessauite-(Y) (Orlandi et al. [8]).

Dessauite-(Y) is a rare member of the crichtonite supergroup and occurs as few millimetres flattened rhombohedral crystals, tabular {001} with hexagonal outline, black or blackish brown in colour, and metallic up to subadamantine lustre.

This paper deals with clarifying the identification of historical samples, rediscovered after many years, using modern analytical techniques, and it gives additional information on known mineral species, such as the Raman spectrum of dessauite-(Y) and gramaccioliite-(Y) (Orlandi et al. [9]), until now never published. In addition, it is interesting to outline that the occurrence of dessauite-(Y) in La Beaume (Oulx, Susa Valley, Piedmont, Italy) represents the first probed finding for the Piedmont region and the fourth finding for Italy.

2. The Crichtonite Supergroup

The minerals of the crichtonite supergroup belong to the oxide class containing medium to high size cations (Table 1). The structural formula of the group is (Φ)38, where = Ba, K, Pb, Sr, La, Ce, Na, Ca; = Mn, Y, U, Fe, Zr, Sc; = Fe, Mg, Zn; = Ti, Fe, Cr, Nb, V, Mn; and (Φ)38 = O, (OH), F (Wülser et al. [10]). These minerals are isostructural, crystallizing in the trigonal system, space group R-3, with lattices a = 10.28−10.576 Å and c = 20.52−21.325 Å, and they present a great variability of composition (only Ti and Fe are systematically present).

3. Material and Methods

The choice of analytical methods was oriented on nondestructive analyses, due to the scarcity, the small dimensions, and the historical relevance of the samples.

The chemical composition was obtained with semiquantitative, nondestructive EDS microanalysis, for determination of major and minor elements; microRaman spectroscopy was used for identification purposes and spectrum collection. Crystallographic data were achieved by X-ray diffraction.

EDS data were acquired by SEM-EDS analysis using a Cambridge Stereoscan 360 Scanning Electron Microscope, equipped with an Oxford Inca Energy 200 EDS Microanalysis, Pentafet detector, and ultrathin window for the determination of elements with Z number down to boron. All the spectra were obtained at 15 kV accelerating voltage, 25 mm working distance, and 1 μA probe current, for time comprising between 60 and 300 seconds. Primary standardization was performed on SPI Supplies and Polaron Equipment analytical standards and daily standardization performed on high purity metallic cobalt standard. A good quantitative analysis usually requires a very flat and polished surface, but this could have been obtained only by causing the destruction of the sample. So a small crystal was instead glued on carbon conductive tape and graphitized for analysis.

X-ray powder and single-crystal diffraction studies were carried out using an Oxford Gemini R Ultra diffractometer equipped with a CCD area detector at CrisDi (Interdepartmental Centre for the Research and Development of Crystallography, Torino, Italy). Graphite-monochromatized MoKα radiation (λ = 0.71073 Å) was used.

Unpolarized microRaman spectra were obtained on an unpolished crystal with a Jobin-Yvon Horiba model LabRam HRVIS, using a motorized x-y stage and an Olympus microscope with a 50x objective.

The backscattered Raman signal was collected with 50x objective and the Raman spectrum was obtained for a nonoriented crystal. The 632.8 nm line of a He-Ne laser was used as excitation; laser power was controlled by means of a series of density filters. The minimum lateral and depth resolution was set to few μm. The system was calibrated using the 520.6 cm−1 Raman band of silicon before each experimental session. The spectra were collected with multiple acquisitions (2 to 6) with single counting times ranging between 20 and 120 seconds. Spectral manipulation such as baseline adjustment, smoothing, and normalization were performed using the Labspec 5 software package. Band component analysis was undertaken using the Fityk software package (Wojdyr [11]), which enabled the type of fitting function to be selected and allows specific parameters to be fixed or varied accordingly.

4. Results and Discussion

4.1. Chemical and Spectroscopic Data
4.1.1. EDS Analyses

One of the two well-formed crystals, millimetres in size, found in the old material of the MRSN (Turin, Italy), was analysed (Figure 2). A total of 10 point analyses were collected with homogeneous results for major and minor elements, and the analytical data are reported in Table 2. In Figure 3, the position of some analyses points obtained on different clean and almost flat faces of the crystal is visible.

Main elements correspond to titanium, iron, yttrium, strontium, uranium, ytterbium, vanadium, and oxygen. Traces of sodium, calcium, and scandium are also detected. Other elements, as lanthanum and cerium, are below the detection limits and have not been considered. On some spectra inhomogeneous presence of silicon is probably due to surface contamination.

The empirical formula calculated on the basis of 38 O atoms apfu (consistent with members of the crichtonite supergroup) is (Sr0.70Na0.25Ca0.09)(Σ=1.04) (Y0.62U0.18Yb0.09Sc0.08)(Σ=0.97) (Ti12.66 )(Σ=17.70)O38, disregarding Si which can be considered contamination by quartz. The following simplified chemical formula is Sr(Y,U)Fe2(Ti,Fe)18O38, in agreement with the composition of dessauite-(Y) (Orlandi et al. [8]).

4.1.2. μ-Raman Spectroscopy

Due to the lack of the dessauite-(Y) Raman spectra in the database we have compared the collected spectra to those of some mineral species that belong to the crichtonite supergroup, in particular gramaccioliite-(Y) (Ciriotti and Bittarello personal communication) from the type locality of Sambuco (Stura Valley, Cuneo Province, Italy) and crichtonite, from the database (RRUFF ID 090006) (Laetsch and Downs [12]).

Figure 4 shows the comparison between the Raman spectra (recorded from 200 to 1000 cm−1) of the studied crystals and those of gramaccioliite-(Y) (Orlandi et al. [9]). It is possible to observe a close matching between the collected spectra.

The main Raman bands of dessauite-(Y) are located in the region between 600 and 800 cm−1; the strongest ones are at 604, 683, and 812 cm−1. Other weaker, broad, and multiple bands are visible at 240, 293, 329, 360, 430, 485, and 520 cm−1. Due to the strong fluorescence, even in the region of the bending and stretching of O–H bonds, no detectable Raman signals could be collected.

4.1.3. X-Ray Crystallography

X-ray powder and single-crystal diffraction data were obtained from a small fragment (0.05 × 0.05 × 0.02 mm) of one of the analyzed specimens.

Structurally, the sample studied crystallizes in the trigonal system, space group R-3, with the unit-cell parameters: a = 10.376(3) Å, c = 20.903(6) Å, and V = 1949(1) Å3 and the powder diffraction data are shown in Table 3. All the data are in accordance with the crystallographic feature of the dessauite-(Y) (Orlandi et al. [8]).

5. Conclusions

EDS analysis showed the presence of major elements like iron, titanium, and oxygen. Microprobe analyses also revealed amounts of strontium, yttrium, ytterbium, vanadium, and uranium, all of them below 5% in weight. Silicon (average 0.20% in weight) was not considered because it might derive from surface contamination. The specimens, in fact, were not polished or treated in any way but only graphite coated and could possibly retain other minerals or alteration layers on their surface, even though optical microscopy and SEM observation helped in choosing clean portion where analyses were performed.

Chemical data, crystallographic features, and Raman spectrum permit identifying the mineral as a Pb-free dessauite-(Y), member of the crichtonite supergroup, characterized by the presence of Sr, Y, Fe3+, and Ti as dominants at the relevant structural sites. In the following Table 4 we show the comparison between the old data of Kelly et al. [6] and our new data.

In conclusion, the “mohsite” of Lévy (samples of the Lacroix collection from Le Plate Muratouse, Dauphiné, the current French Department of Hautes-Alpes), studied by Kelly et al. [6], and the samples found by Colomba at La Beaume, Oulx, Italy, studied in 1902 and stored by the same author in the collection of the Turin University at the MRSN with the label “Manaccanite (Mohsite),” are both dessauite-(Y).

To outline the scarcity of this mineral, the Le Plate Muratouse represents the first occurrence of dessauite-(Y) from France and the occurrence of La Beaume represents the first probed finding for the Piedmont region, the fourth for Italy, and the fifth in the world. Anyway, we are almost sure that the sample object of the present paper is one of the oldest specimens of dessauite-(Y) found.

Finally, with this paper, a complete clarification is given about the identity of the “minerals” historically known as “mohsite of Lévy” and “mohsite of Colomba” and a bit everywhere erroneously reported (e.g., Egleston [13], de Fourestier [14], Bayliss [15], and Internet pages) as “manaccanite” (axotomous iron), Pb-rich crichtonite, or ilmenite.

Conflict of Interests

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.