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Redding (Reading), Fairfield County, Connecticut, USAi
Regional Level Types
Redding (Reading)- not defined -
Fairfield CountyCounty
ConnecticutState
USACountry

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PhotosMapsSearch
Latitude & Longitude (WGS84):
41° 18' 9'' North , 73° 23' 0'' West
Latitude & Longitude (decimal):
Köppen climate type:
Nearest Settlements:
PlacePopulationDistance
Georgetown1,805 (2017)6.8km
Bethel9,549 (2017)8.1km
Easton7,625 (2017)9.1km
Ridgefield7,645 (2017)9.9km
Cannondale141 (2017)10.2km
Nearest Clubs:
Local clubs are the best way to get access to collecting localities
ClubLocationDistance
Danbury Mineralogical SocietyDanbury, Connecticut12km
Stamford Mineralogical SocietyStamford, Connecticut31km
New Haven Mineral ClubNew Haven, Connecticut38km
Mindat Locality ID:
13427
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:2:13427:6
GUID (UUID V4):
43e6a0a2-7efd-4423-94cb-e7dc2bf0ecbc


A town incorporated in 1767, originally spelled "Reading" but changed shortly after to better reflect its pronunciation.

Geologically, most of the town is underlain by Ordovician unnamed leucocratic orthogneiss or by a central belt of Cambro-Ordovician Rowe Schist and Ordovician Ratlum Mountain Schist that was originally Iapetos Ocean bottom sediments. Cameron's Line, a major Taconian orogenic suture, crosses the NW corner of town and separates the above rocks from Laurentian Proterozoic gneisses and Cambrian Stockbridge Marble and associated calc-silicate rocks.

Select Mineral List Type

Standard Detailed Gallery Strunz Chemical Elements

Commodity List

This is a list of exploitable or exploited mineral commodities recorded from this region.


Mineral List

Mineral list contains entries from the region specified including sub-localities

80 valid minerals. 9 (TL) - type locality of valid minerals. 7 erroneous literature entries.

Detailed Mineral List:

Actinolite
Formula: ◻Ca2(Mg4.5-2.5Fe0.5-2.5)Si8O22(OH)2
Habit: prismatic
Colour: dark greenish-black
Description: Straited, flattened, elongated prismatic crystals in a calcite-quartz-scapolite-amphibole-chalcopyrite matrix.
Albite
Formula: Na(AlSi3O8)
Habit: blocky, equant
Colour: white to pale gray
Fluorescence: lavender, magenta-pink
Description: Besides a major constituent of the pegmatite, crystals in small pockets reach up to about 2 cm, often in dense clusters, also as overgrowth on microcline on cleavelandite and psuedomorphous after muscovite in the wall zone.
Albite var. Cleavelandite
Formula: Na(AlSi3O8)
Habit: tabular prisms
Colour: white
Fluorescence: reddish magenta to lavender
Description: As irregular aggregates of small subhedral crystals, often in very aesthetic arrangements, and as veins 1/8 to ¼ inch wide and as much as 6 feet long.
Albite var. Oligoclase
Formula: (Na,Ca)[Al(Si,Al)Si2O8]
Alluaudite ?
Formula: (Na,Ca)Mn2+(Fe3+,Mn2+,Fe2+,Mg)2(PO4)3
Habit: pseudomorph after triphylite?
Description: From Januzzi (1994): "Alluaudite, collected and recently identified by the author as occurring at Branchville (confirmation by Kampf, Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History), is evidently a pseudomorph after euhedral crystals of triphylite." Needs confirmation.
Almandine
Formula: Fe2+3Al2(SiO4)3
Habit: dodecahedral
Colour: dark red, maroon
Description: Well-formed almandine crystals to about 3 cm. XRF analysis shows Fe:Mn ratio of 100:1.
Amblygonite
Formula: LiAl(PO4)F
Description: Penfield's 1879 analysis of a Branchville specimen showed an OH:F ratio of 1.02, making this specimen montebrasite as now defined. Many references are not specific to species, back then all of the massive lithium phosphate of this series was generically called "amblygonite". It is now known that the amblygonite species is incredibly uncommon even in localities which have fluorite, massive fluorapatite, and topaz. Therefore, specimens from this locality are most likely montebrasite.
Annite
Formula: KFe2+3(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Habit: subhedral tabular
Colour: black
Fluorescence: none
Description: fka biotite: found radiating from cyrtolite/quartz/muscovite aggregates
'Apatite'
Formula: Ca5(PO4)3(Cl/F/OH)
Habit: aggregates of elongated, crude prisms
Colour: white
Description: Reportedly the carbonate-rich variety. In small pockets in cleavelandite.
'Apophyllite Group'
Formula: AB4[Si8O22]X · 8H2O
Habit: bipyramidal modified by prism
Colour: white
Description: crystals to 5mm associated with natrolite
Autunite
Formula: Ca(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 10-12H2O
Description: "autunite" mentioned as an accessory by Cameron et al (1954), but probably dehydrated to meta-autunite
Bertrandite
Formula: Be4(Si2O7)(OH)2
Habit: tabular to equant
Colour: colorless
Description: drusy micro crystals coating cavities, also probably pseudomorphous after beryl
Beryl
Formula: Be3Al2(Si6O18)
Habit: tapered to columnar aggregates
Colour: yellow-green, green, gray
Description: columnar aggregates up to 2 feet long.
Beryl var. Aquamarine
Formula: Be3Al2Si6O18
Beryl var. Goshenite
Formula: Be3Al2(Si6O18)
Beryl var. Heliodor
Formula: Be3Al2(Si6O18)
Beryl var. Morganite
Formula: Be3Al2(Si6O18)
Colour: pink
'Biotite'
Formula: K(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
Bismuth
Formula: Bi
Bismutite
Formula: (BiO)2CO3
Habit: earthy alteration of bismuthinite
Colour: white, gray, yellow
Description: in cleavelandite as an alteration of bismuthinite, associated with wulfenite, pyromorphite and cerussite
Brazilianite ?
Formula: NaAl3(PO4)2(OH)4
Habit: spheroidal aggregate with a radial, coarse fibrous structure
Description: according to Januzzi (1976 & 1994): micro-crystal found in the outer altered portion of an amblygonite crystal
Calcite
Formula: CaCO3
Cerussite
Formula: PbCO3
Description: micros occur in cavities in cleavelandite associated with altered bismuthinite, pyromorphite and wulfenite
Chabazite-Ca
Formula: (Ca,K2,Na2)2[Al2Si4O12]2 · 12H2O
Habit: Rhombohedra, also embedded grains in lithiophilite.
Colour: brownish-orange to reddish brown
Description: Extremely rare. Chemical analysis by Brush and Dana (1879b) show this material is chabazite-Ca of modern nomenclature. Their description is: "This species occurs of a dark yellowish to reddish brown color, in irregular masses disseminated though quartz, and sometimes imbedded directly in the green chloritic material, and also in the massive manganesian carbonate [rhodochrosite] occurring with the lithiophilite. A few small crystals 1/4 to 1/2 inch, were found in cavities." One specimen of these crystals remains in the Yale collection (025313). Massive material shows a resinous, translucent orange-colored cores with lighter colored aureoles. The article provides additional data regarding the mineral and a complete wet chemical analysis corresponding with the accepted limits of chabazite.
Chalcopyrite
Formula: CuFeS2
Habit: massive
Description: Massive material in a calc-silicate rock.
Clinozoisite
Formula: (CaCa)(AlAlAl)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Habit: acicular
Colour: green-gray
Description: An apple green to grey mineral found in terminated crystals up to two inches long. Occasionally a piece will be found with a radiating fan of crystals similar to stilbite.
Columbite-(Fe)
Formula: Fe2+Nb2O6
Habit: Masses and well developed tabular to prismatic crystals & parallel groups,
Colour: black
Description: Crystals and groups reached “remarkable size”. Yale has crystals and groups to over 10 cm. 500 pounds were mined between 1880-90.
'Columbite-(Fe)-Columbite-(Mn) Series'
'Cymatolite'
Habit: pseudomorphs after spodumene
Colour: white to pale gray
Description: oriented intergrowth of very fine-grained, elongated albite and muscovite. Grains are oriented perpendicular to the spodumene c axis and give a columnar, silky appearance to the inside of a fractured specimen. Crystals pseudomorphs after spodumene at Yale to 32 x 70 cm.
Dickinsonite-(KMnNa) (TL)
Formula: (KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn2+13Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
Type Locality:
Habit: foliated crystalline masses, almost micaceous, radiating or stellated curved laminae
Colour: oil to olive green, dark to grass-green
Description: Intimately associated with quartz, eosphorite, triploidite and rhodochrosite
Diopside
Formula: CaMgSi2O6
Habit: short prisms
Colour: green
Description: Occasionally well formed.
Elbaite
Formula: Na(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Habit: massive
Colour: blue
Description: A small ~1.5 cm nodule of massive blue elbaite, rimmed by muscovite, embedded in granular albite was found by Marcelle Weber in 1957. Labeled as "muscovite after triphylite". Despite the abundance of Li at this locality, this may be the only specimen of elbaite from here.
Eosphorite (TL)
Formula: Mn2+Al(PO4)(OH)2 · H2O
Type Locality:
Habit: mostly massive, rare prismatic crystals
Colour: pale pink, grayish-, bluish-, and yellowish-white, white
Description: Intimately associated with quartz, dickinsonite, triploidite and rhodochrosite. Pink, translucent, prismatic crystals to around 1 cm long show rough striae parallel to the long axis, associated with micro encrusting quartz and apatite.
Eucryptite (TL)
Formula: LiAlSiO4
Type Locality:
Habit: pseudomorphous after spodumene
Colour: white to slightly greenish-white or pale gray
Fluorescence: red
Description: oriented intergrowth with very fine-grained, elongated albite. Grains are oriented perpendicular to the spodumene c axis and give an indistinct fibrous to columnar structure, this being always at right angles to the adjoining surface of the original mineral. Fractured surface typically has a frosty appearance.
Fairfieldite (TL)
Formula: Ca2Mn2+(PO4)2 · 2H2O
Type Locality:
Habit: foliated to lamellar masses, radiating masses consisting of curved foliated or fibrous aggregations
Colour: white to pale straw-yellow
Description: One variety cccurs filling cavities in the reddingite, and covering the distinct crystals of this mineral. It is uniformly clear and transparent, and is highly lustrous, showing entire absence of even incipient alteration. It is generally foliated to lamellar, although sometimes of a somewhat radiated structure. A second variety occurs in masses of considerable size interpenetrated rather irregularly with quartz, and quite uniformly run through with thin seams and lines of a black manganesian mineral of not very clearly defined character. Typically friable to the touch and lacks something of the brilliant luster of the first variety, it also shows greater difference of structure, passing from the distinct crystals to the massive and radiated form. Also occurs in small particles in fillowite and in masses of some size immediately associated with eosphorite, triploidite, and dickinsonite.
Fillowite (TL)
Formula: Na3CaMn2+11(PO4)9
Type Locality:
Habit: granular aggregates, rare micro rhombohedra in tiny pockets
Colour: honey-yellow, wax-yellow, also yellowish to reddish-brown
Description: Reddingite is very commonly associated with fillowite, and in many cases it is not easy to distinguish the two minerals.
Fluorapatite
Formula: Ca5(PO4)3F
Habit: hexagonal prisms
Colour: colorless, white, pale to dark blue-green
Fluorescence: yellow
Description: Crystals frozen in matrix are generally subhedral and opaque, generally the paler colored crystals or portions fluoresce much better than the darker color. Micro crystals in pockets in albite can be clear, colorless and euhedral with bright yellow fluorescence that helps locate them. Also chabazite, quartz, and fluorapatite crystallized in cavities in rhodochrosite associated with clove-brown lithiophilite, quartz, fluorapatite, and dickinsonite.
Fluorapatite var. Manganese-bearing Fluorapatite
Formula: (Ca,Mn2+)5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) or Ca5([P,Mn5+]O4)3(F,Cl,OH)
Fluorite
Formula: CaF2
Description: An accessory in the wall zone.
Fluorite var. Chlorophane
Formula: CaF2
Forsterite
Formula: Mg2SiO4
'Garnet Group'
Formula: X3Z2(SiO4)3
Habit: trapezohedral pseudomorph
Colour: rusty
Description: micaceous, spongy, rusty pseudomorph after an unknown garnet species in the pegmatite
Goethite
Formula: α-Fe3+O(OH)
Habit: pseudomorphous after pyrite
Colour: brown
Description: forms pseudomorphs after micro pyrite crystals in cleavelandite
Graphite
Formula: C
Greenockite
Formula: CdS
Habit: coating
Colour: yellow
Description: Yellow coating on sphalerite.
Grossular
Formula: Ca3Al2(SiO4)3
Habit: dodecahedral
Colour: orange to cinnamon
Description: Massive matrix material and lustrous crystals to 1.5 inches lining voids or hiding under calcite.
Grossular var. Hessonite
Formula: Ca3Al2(SiO4)3
Habit: dodecahedral
Colour: orange to cinnamon
Description: Massive matrix material and lustrous crystals to 1.5 inches lining voids or hiding under calcite.
'Gummite' ?
Habit: encrustations
Colour: yellow
Description: Material labeled "gummite" in the Yale collection appears as yellow encrustations on cleavelandite and columbite. Portions fluoresce weakly or strongly in SW UV so appear more likely to be uranophane and meta-autunite.
Harmotome
Formula: Ba2(Si12Al4)O32 · 12H2O
Hematite
Formula: Fe2O3
Heterosite
Formula: (Fe3+,Mn3+)PO4
Description: The cited reference used by Seaman is false. Lithiophilite may be leached and oxidized to purpurite. The process does not materially alter the Mn:Fe ratio of the parent material (Paulus Brian Moore, personal communication).
'Heulandite Subgroup'
'Hornblende'
Description: constituent mineral of the amphibolite bordering the pegmatite mentioned in Cameron et al (1954)
Hureaulite
Formula: Mn2+5(PO3OH)2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
Habit: short prismatic to tabular, in parallel growth
Colour: typically white to pink, pale violet to reddish brown and deep orange-red
Description: Massive, sub-resinous, white to pale material in the Yale collection reminiscent of massive scapolite. Tiny crystals in small vugs. Formed from an alteration of lithiophilite, intimately associated with dickinsonite, eosphorite, fairfieldite, reddingite, fillowite, triploidite. Difficult to distinguish from reddingite.
Hydroxylapatite
Formula: Ca5(PO4)3(OH)
Habit: elongated hexagonal prisms with rounded edges and terminations
Colour: pale yellow with frosty terminations
Fluorescence: none
Description: Frosty, translucent, pale yellow micro crystals encrusting pocket quartz, cleavelandite, and a much larger, glassy fluorapatite crystal. Originally labeled as calcite, but does not react to HCl, has hardness 5, no visible cleaveage, and does not fluoresce.
Ilmenite
Formula: Fe2+TiO3
Habit: subhedral tabular
Colour: steel gray
Description: mentioned in Cameron et al (1954) as an accessory mineral of the surrounding amphibolite; crude crystals in quartz core of the pegmatite with annite near the contact with surrounding rock (Januzzi collection)
Landesite ?
Formula: Mn2+3-xFe3+x(PO4)2(OH)x · (3-x)H2O
Habit: alteration
Colour: dark brown
Description: "Landesite may occur as a dark brown alteration product of reddingite at Branchville."
Lazulite ?
Formula: MgAl2(PO4)2(OH)2
Colour: blue
Description: "(?) This occurrence, unlike the vivianite, was observed embedded in altered rim of amblygonite (montebrasite). Not enough material for positive ID." Januzzi (1994)
'Limonite'
Lithiophilite (TL)
Formula: LiMn2+PO4
Type Locality:
Habit: irregular blocky to rounded masses
Colour: bright salmon, honey-yellow, yellowish-brown to umber-brown
Description: The anhedral to subhedral masses are typically 1 to 3 inches in diameter and coated with a black alteration. Alteration sometimes has penetrated deep into the mass so that original color is only in the core. Secondary Mn phosphates are associated. Original type material analyzed in Brush and Dana (1878) had Mn/Mn + Fe ratio of about 0.9. Landes (1925) analyzed lithiophilite from this locality and found the Mn/Mn + Fe ratio was 0.72
Lithiophilite var. Sicklerite
Formula: Li1-x(Mn3+xMn2+1-x)PO4
Habit: crusts
Colour: brown, yellow-brown, reddish-brown
Description: An alteration product forming brown rinds around nodules of lithiophilite.
Magnetite
Formula: Fe2+Fe3+2O4
'Manganese Oxides'
Habit: dendritic
Colour: black
Description: In fractures and coating various minerals.
'Manganese Oxides var. Manganese Dendrites'
Habit: dendritic
Colour: black
Description: In fractures and coating various minerals.
Marcasite
Formula: FeS2
Melanterite
Formula: Fe2+(H2O)6SO4 · H2O
Mesolite
Formula: Na2Ca2Si9Al6O30 · 8H2O
Habit: acicular, radiating
Colour: white
Description: At least some of what has been considered natrolite (visually) from this locality proved to be mesolite (EDS), though other crystals could still be natrolite.
Meta-autunite
Formula: Ca(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 6H2O
Habit: flakes and coatings
Colour: pale yellow
Fluorescence: green
Description: "autunite" mentioned as an accessory by Cameron et al (1954), but probably dehydrated to meta-autunite. Material labeled "gummite" in the Yale collection appears identical to other specimens labeled "autunite".
Metaswitzerite
Formula: Mn2+3(PO4)2 · 4H2O
Description: Januzzi reported it as switzerite, which dehydrates to metaswitzerite according to Zanazzi (1986). Januzzi reference provides no details. Caption for http://www.mindat.org/photo-199679.html indicates confirmation by unknown methods.
Metatorbernite
Formula: Cu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 8H2O
Habit: flakes to tabular, square prisms
Colour: green
Description: "torbernite" mentioned as an accessory by Cameron et al (1954), but probably dehydrated to metatorbernite
Microcline
Formula: K(AlSi3O8)
'Microlite Group'
Formula: A2-mTa2X6-wZ-n
Habit: octahedral
Colour: dark brown
Description: "small, dark brown, octahedral crystals in albite (cleavelandite)"
Mitridatite
Formula: Ca2Fe3+3(PO4)3O2 · 3H2O
Habit: coatings
Colour: greenish yellow
Description: Greenish yellow coatings on the phosphate minerals in the Yale collection, some are labeled as mitridatite.
Montebrasite
Formula: LiAl(PO4)(OH)
Habit: massive and columnar or blocky subhedral
Colour: white
Description: Penfield's 1879 analysis of a Branchville specimen showed an OH:F ratio of 1.02, making this specimen montebrasite as now defined. Many references are not specific to species, back then all of the massive lithium phosphate of this series was generically called "amblygonite". It is now known that the amblygonite species is incredibly uncommon even in localities which have fluorite, massive fluorapatite, and topaz. Therefore, specimens from this locality are most likely montebrasite.
Montmorillonite
Formula: (Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2(Si4O10)(OH)2 · nH2O
Muscovite
Formula: KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Habit: pseudohexagonal tabular prisms, curved subparallel aggregates (ballpeen habit)
Colour: silver, gray
Description: The "ball peen" habit of radiating, curved crystals is particularly well developed. Tabular crystals range from 1 to 24 inches in diameter and 1/8 to 12 inches in thickness. Most of the books are about 5 inches in diameter and 1 inch thick. About 15 percent of the muscovite visible in the wall zone is pseudomoorphed by what appears to be albite and quartz. Perfect pseudomorphs after muscovite have been formed. The replacement was limited to certain parts of the zone; these are irregular in outline and appear distributed without relation to the original structural or mineralogical features of the zone. Within these parts practically all the muscovite adjacent to the wall rock contact, including that in the border zone, has been replaced, but mica in the inner one-third or one-fourth of the wall zone is mostly unaffected. Large books that extend across the full thickness of the zone grade from unaltered muscovite in the inner part to pseudomorphs in the outer part.
Muscovite var. Damourite
Formula: KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Description: Brush and Dana (1878) (first paper) state that they found "a hydro-mica near damourite having a peculiar concentric spherical structure" [emphasis added]. They did not actually identify damourite.
Natrolite
Formula: Na2Al2Si3O10 · 2H2O
Habit: acicular with flat pyramidal termination
Colour: colorless, white
Description: Radiating open sprays of individual crystals, at least 1 cm long. At least one potential natrolite specimen has proven to be mesolite (via EDS), so perhaps more or all are actually the latter mineral.
Natrophilite (TL)
Formula: NaMn2+PO4
Type Locality:
Habit: massive, local alterations within lithiophilite
Colour: deep, wine-yellow
Description: Small regions within lithiophilite nodules. Description of type material from Brush and Dana (1890): "The luster is brilliant resinous to nearly adamantine; it was, in fact, the brilliancy of the luster which first attracted our attention, and which is, so far as the eye is concerned, its most distinguishing character. The mineral itself is perfectly clear and transparent, but the masses are much fractured and rifted. The surfaces are often covered by a very thin scale of an undetermined mineral, having a fine fibrous form, a delicate yellowish color and silky luster. This same mineral penetrates the masses wherever there is a fracture surface of cleavage or otherwise. What the exact nature of this mineral is we are unable to say, since the amount is too small to admit of a satisfactory determination - it appears to be a manganesian phosphate. It is evidently an alteration-product and would seem to imply that natrophilite is rather subject to easy chemical change. In any case this silky film is one of the characteristic features of the mineral, and directs attention to it at once even over the surface of a hand specimen where it is associated with lithiophilite and perhaps three or four other of these phosphates."
Opal
Formula: SiO2 · nH2O
Description: "Excellent specimens have been found" Januzzi (1994)
Opal var. Opal-AN
Formula: SiO2 · nH2O
Description: "Excellent specimens have been found" Januzzi (1994)
Phosphuranylite
Formula: KCa(H3O)3(UO2)7(PO4)4O4 · 8H2O
Purpurite
Formula: Mn3+(PO4)
Habit: encrustations, coatings
Colour: purple
Description: "Supergene alteration resulted in the formation of manganese oxide and purpurite from lithiophilite" Shainin (1946). Yale collection has a few specimens that show purple coating on black exterior of altered lithiophilite nodules.
Pyrite
Formula: FeS2
Description: an accessory in the wall zone
Pyrolusite
Formula: Mn4+O2
Description: No manganese dendrite or staining in a granite pegmatite in the world has been verified as pyrolusite. The name was a mistake in the nineteenth century which has been widely publicized.
Pyromorphite ?
Formula: Pb5(PO4)3Cl
Description: Januzzi reports micros occur in cavities in cleavelandite associated with bismutite, wulfenite and cerussite. An inspection of his surviving material so far has not revealed this mineral, but there are yellow coatings associated with the above minerals that are more likely a secondary bismuth mineral.
'Pyroxene Group'
Formula: ADSi2O6
Quartz
Formula: SiO2
Quartz var. Rose Quartz
Formula: SiO2
Habit: massive
Colour: pink
Quartz var. Smoky Quartz
Formula: SiO2
Reddingite (TL)
Formula: (Mn2+,Fe2+)3(PO4)2 · 3H2O
Type Locality:
Habit: bipyramidal, pseudo-octahedral - in tiny pockets in massive material
Colour: pale rose-pink to yellowish-white, sometimes brown
Description: From the type material description in Brush and Dana (1878): "Reddingite occurs sparingly in minute octahedral crystals; belonging to the orthorhombic system. It is also found more generally massive with granular structure; it is associated with dickinsonite, and sometimes with triploidite. As compared with the other species which have been described it is a decidedly rare mineral. The massive mineral shows a distinct cleavage in one plane...crystals are occasionally coated dark from surface alteration" Difficult to distinguish from pink hureaulite or yellowish fillowite.
Rhodochrosite
Formula: MnCO3
Habit: cleavable masses
Colour: white to pink
Description: Associated with eosphorite, dickinsonite, triploidite, quartz, also included in lithiophilite. Also chabazite, quartz, and fluorapatite crystallized in cavities in rhodochrosite associated with clove-brown lithiophilite, quartz, apatite, and dickinsonite. Typically with black alteration crust.
Samarskite-(Y)
Formula: YFe3+Nb2O8
Habit: massive
Colour: black
'Scapolite'
Habit: massive
Description: Massive material in a calc-silicate rock with quartz, calcite, amphibole, and chalcopyrite.
Schorl
Formula: NaFe2+3Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Sillimanite
Formula: Al2(SiO4)O
Spessartine
Formula: Mn2+3Al2(SiO4)3
Habit: trapezohedral
Colour: orange-brown
Description: Many references include "garnet" but none give a specific species except Januzzi who provides no analyses. However, spessartine is very likely given the abundance of Mn minerals in this pegmatite and the orange-brown color typical of near end-member crystals analyzed at other Connecticut pegmatites.
Sphalerite
Formula: ZnS
Habit: massive
Colour: maroon to black
Description: Massive, resinous micro material in cleavelandite.
Spodumene
Formula: LiAlSi2O6
Habit: subhedral prisms, flattened parallel to a {100}, with dome terminations
Colour: white to peach
Description: rarely as gemmy kunzite, usually white. The prisms average 1 foot long, 6 inches wide and 3/4 inch thick but can reach up to 3 or 4 feet long and 8 to 9 inches thick. Much of it is altered to an albite/eucryptite parallel intergrowth mixture, to "cymatolite" (a parallel intergrowth mixture or albite and muscovite), to granular microcline, or to massive albite and muscovite - or a progressive combination of these replacements.
Spodumene var. Kunzite
Formula: LiAlSi2O6
Habit: generally broad or flat, and comparatively thin; well terminated by dome
Colour: rose-pink or amethystine-purple
Description: Usually in the unaltered core of externally altered cyrstals and only very rarely transparent.
Staurolite
Formula: Fe2+2Al9Si4O23(OH)
'Stilbite Subgroup'
Formula: M6-7[Al8-9Si27-28O72] · nH2O
Habit: radiating sheaves
Description: occurring on the surfaces of seams in cleavelandite
Switzerite
Formula: Mn2+3(PO4)2 · 7H2O
Tantalite-(Mn)
Formula: Mn2+Ta2O6
Habit: subhedral prismatic micro crystals
Colour: maroon
Description: Comstock (1880) analyzed scant material found by Brush and Dana with a gravity of 6.5, almost no Fe, and niobium to tantalum atomic ratio of 1:1.04 making it just barely tantalite-(Mn). Maroon, translucent micro crystals in cleavelandite.
Titanite
Formula: CaTi(SiO4)O
Description: an accessory in the surrounding amphibolite
Topaz
Formula: Al2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
Habit: short prismatic
Colour: colorless
Fluorescence: bright yellow-white under SW and MW UV
Description: In Januzzi (1994) he mentions topaz "reported as a single occurrence; additional information is needed concerning the authenticity of the find". In a specimen formerly in his collection are a few glassy, colorless, complexly terminated microcrystals identified as topaz, found in voids a very fine-grained cleavelandite matrix partly filled with calcite. But when examined under SW UV light, they fluoresce the typical bright yellow-white of fluorapatite. They also do not show the perfect basal cleavage of topaz.
Torbernite
Formula: Cu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 12H2O
Description: "torbernite" mentioned as an accessory by Cameron et al (1954), but probably dehydrated to metatorbernite
'Tourmaline'
Formula: AD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
'Tourmaline var. Verdelite'
Formula: A(D3)G6(T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
Colour: green
Description: "green tourmaline" mentioned by Cameron et al (1954) in the border zone of the pegmatite.
Tremolite
Formula: ◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
Triphylite
Formula: LiFe2+PO4
Habit: blocky
Colour: blue-gray
Description: At least one 12 x 15 mm crystals, collected by Ronald Januzzi and certainly visually appears to be a triphylite, though rather mottled within, and he considered it pseudomorphed by alluaudite. In Januzzi (1994) he writes: "Alluaudite, collected and recently identified by the author as occurring at Branchville (confirmation by Kampf, Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History), is evidently a pseudomorph after euhedral crystals of triphylite." Needs confirmation.
Triplite
Formula: Mn2+2(PO4)F
Description: Brush and Dana (1878) established the presence of triploidite and compared it to triplite but noted the absence of fluorine. In 4 detailed papers on the various Mn phosphates they do not mention that triplite actually occurs there.
Triploidite (TL)
Formula: Mn2+2(PO4)(OH)
Type Locality:
Habit: divergent to parallel-fibrous to columnar crystalline aggregates, compact, massive. rarely prismatic
Colour: yellowish to reddish-brown, topaz- to wine-yellow, hyacinth-red
Description: mostly columnar, fibrous, radiating, rare isolated but typically vitreous and transparent crystals to a length of an inch or more. Associated with quartz and the other Mn phosphates and rhododchrosite.
Uraninite
Formula: UO2
Habit: octahedral
Colour: black
Description: uraninite "in brilliant black octahedrons" associated with lithiophilite, fluorapatite, garnet, uranium phosphates, and cyrtolite. Crystals used in several early radiometric daughter product and age dating studies.
Uranophane
Formula: Ca(UO2)2(SiO3OH)2 · 5H2O
Habit: encrustations
Colour: pale yellow
Description: mentioned by Brush and Dana (1879) as "a silicate containing uranium". Specimens labeled "gummite" and "autunite" in the Yale collections are similar appearing coatings on cleavelandite and columbite. Portions fluoresce strongly and weakly under SW UV and so are more likely meta-autunite and uranophane, respectively.
Vivianite
Formula: Fe2+3(PO4)2 · 8H2O
Habit: coatings, micro prismatic crystals
Colour: blue, greenish-blue
Description: In thin layers as an alteration of lithiophilite and reddingite and as micro crystals, minute amounts. Some seen on altered lithiophilite nodules in the Yale collection.
Wulfenite
Formula: Pb(MoO4)
Habit: pyramidal
Colour: orange-yellow
Description: micro-wulfenite occurs in cavities in cleavelandite associated with bismutite, pyromorphite and cerussite
Xanthoxenite ?
Formula: Ca4Fe3+2(PO4)4(OH)2 · 3H2O
Description: may occur associated with lithiophilite
Zircon
Formula: Zr(SiO4)
Zircon var. Cyrtolite
Formula: Zr[(SiO4),(OH)4]
Habit: aggregates
Colour: dark brown to black
Description: pure aggregates surrounded by smoky, fractured quartz; or aggregates with quartz and muscovite in the cores of radiating cleavelandite

Gallery:

List of minerals arranged by Strunz 10th Edition classification

Group 1 - Elements
Bismuth1.CA.05Bi
Graphite1.CB.05aC
Group 2 - Sulphides and Sulfosalts
Chalcopyrite2.CB.10aCuFeS2
Greenockite2.CB.45CdS
Marcasite2.EB.10aFeS2
Pyrite2.EB.05aFeS2
Sphalerite2.CB.05aZnS
Group 3 - Halides
Fluorite3.AB.25CaF2
var. Chlorophane3.AB.25CaF2
Group 4 - Oxides and Hydroxides
Columbite-(Fe)4.DB.35Fe2+Nb2O6
Goethite4.00.α-Fe3+O(OH)
Hematite4.CB.05Fe2O3
Ilmenite4.CB.05Fe2+TiO3
Magnetite4.BB.05Fe2+Fe3+2O4
'Microlite Group'4.00.A2-mTa2X6-wZ-n
Opal4.DA.10SiO2 · nH2O
var. Opal-AN4.DA.10SiO2 · nH2O
Pyrolusite ?4.DB.05Mn4+O2
Quartz4.DA.05SiO2
var. Rose Quartz4.DA.05SiO2
var. Smoky Quartz4.DA.05SiO2
Samarskite-(Y)4.DB.25YFe3+Nb2O8
Tantalite-(Mn)4.DB.35Mn2+Ta2O6
Uraninite4.DL.05UO2
Group 5 - Nitrates and Carbonates
Bismutite5.BE.25(BiO)2CO3
Calcite5.AB.05CaCO3
Cerussite5.AB.15PbCO3
Rhodochrosite5.AB.05MnCO3
Group 7 - Sulphates, Chromates, Molybdates and Tungstates
Melanterite7.CB.35Fe2+(H2O)6SO4 · H2O
Wulfenite7.GA.05Pb(MoO4)
Group 8 - Phosphates, Arsenates and Vanadates
Alluaudite ?8.AC.10(Na,Ca)Mn2+(Fe3+,Mn2+,Fe2+,Mg)2(PO4)3
Amblygonite ?8.BB.05LiAl(PO4)F
Autunite8.EB.05Ca(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 10-12H2O
Brazilianite ?8.BK.05NaAl3(PO4)2(OH)4
Dickinsonite-(KMnNa) (TL)8.BF.05(KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn2+13Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
Eosphorite (TL)8.DD.20Mn2+Al(PO4)(OH)2 · H2O
Fairfieldite (TL)8.CG.05Ca2Mn2+(PO4)2 · 2H2O
Fillowite (TL)8.AC.50Na3CaMn2+11(PO4)9
Fluorapatite8.BN.05Ca5(PO4)3F
var. Manganese-bearing Fluorapatite8.BN.05(Ca,Mn2+)5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) or Ca5([P,Mn5+]O4)3(F,Cl,OH)
Heterosite ?8.AB.10(Fe3+,Mn3+)PO4
Hureaulite8.CB.10Mn2+5(PO3OH)2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
Hydroxylapatite8.BN.05Ca5(PO4)3(OH)
Landesite ?8.CC.05Mn2+3-xFe3+x(PO4)2(OH)x · (3-x)H2O
Lazulite ?8.BB.40MgAl2(PO4)2(OH)2
Lithiophilite (TL)8.AB.10LiMn2+PO4
var. Sicklerite8.AB.10Li1-x(Mn3+xMn2+1-x)PO4
Meta-autunite8.EB.10Ca(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 6H2O
Metaswitzerite8.CE.25Mn2+3(PO4)2 · 4H2O
Metatorbernite8.EB.10Cu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 8H2O
Mitridatite8.DH.30Ca2Fe3+3(PO4)3O2 · 3H2O
Montebrasite8.BB.05LiAl(PO4)(OH)
Natrophilite (TL)8.AB.10NaMn2+PO4
Phosphuranylite8.EC.10KCa(H3O)3(UO2)7(PO4)4O4 · 8H2O
Purpurite8.AB.10Mn3+(PO4)
Pyromorphite ?8.BN.05Pb5(PO4)3Cl
Reddingite (TL)8.CC.05(Mn2+,Fe2+)3(PO4)2 · 3H2O
Switzerite ?8.CE.25Mn2+3(PO4)2 · 7H2O
Torbernite8.EB.05Cu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 12H2O
Triphylite8.AB.10LiFe2+PO4
Triplite ?8.BB.10Mn2+2(PO4)F
Triploidite (TL)8.BB.15Mn2+2(PO4)(OH)
Vivianite8.CE.40Fe2+3(PO4)2 · 8H2O
Xanthoxenite ?8.DH.40Ca4Fe3+2(PO4)4(OH)2 · 3H2O
Group 9 - Silicates
Actinolite9.DE.10◻Ca2(Mg4.5-2.5Fe0.5-2.5)Si8O22(OH)2
Albite9.FA.35Na(AlSi3O8)
var. Cleavelandite9.FA.35Na(AlSi3O8)
var. Oligoclase9.FA.35(Na,Ca)[Al(Si,Al)Si2O8]
Almandine9.AD.25Fe2+3Al2(SiO4)3
Annite9.EC.20KFe2+3(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Bertrandite9.BD.05Be4(Si2O7)(OH)2
Beryl9.CJ.05Be3Al2(Si6O18)
var. Aquamarine9.CJ.05Be3Al2Si6O18
var. Goshenite9.CJ.05Be3Al2(Si6O18)
var. Heliodor9.CJ.05Be3Al2(Si6O18)
var. Morganite9.CJ.05Be3Al2(Si6O18)
Chabazite-Ca9.GD.10(Ca,K2,Na2)2[Al2Si4O12]2 · 12H2O
Clinozoisite9.BG.05a(CaCa)(AlAlAl)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Diopside9.DA.15CaMgSi2O6
Elbaite9.CK.05Na(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Eucryptite (TL)9.AA.05LiAlSiO4
Forsterite9.AC.05Mg2SiO4
Grossular9.AD.25Ca3Al2(SiO4)3
var. Hessonite9.AD.25Ca3Al2(SiO4)3
Harmotome9.GC.10Ba2(Si12Al4)O32 · 12H2O
Mesolite9.GA.05Na2Ca2Si9Al6O30 · 8H2O
Microcline9.FA.30K(AlSi3O8)
Montmorillonite9.EC.40(Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2(Si4O10)(OH)2 · nH2O
Muscovite9.EC.15KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
var. Damourite ?9.EC.15KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Natrolite9.GA.05Na2Al2Si3O10 · 2H2O
Schorl9.CK.05NaFe2+3Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Sillimanite9.AF.05Al2(SiO4)O
Spessartine9.AD.25Mn2+3Al2(SiO4)3
Spodumene9.DA.30LiAlSi2O6
var. Kunzite9.DA.30LiAlSi2O6
Staurolite9.AF.30Fe2+2Al9Si4O23(OH)
Titanite9.AG.15CaTi(SiO4)O
Topaz ?9.AF.35Al2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
Tremolite9.DE.10◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
Uranophane9.AK.15Ca(UO2)2(SiO3OH)2 · 5H2O
Zircon9.AD.30Zr(SiO4)
var. Cyrtolite9.AD.30Zr[(SiO4),(OH)4]
Unclassified Minerals, Rocks, etc.
'Apatite'-Ca5(PO4)3(Cl/F/OH)
'Apophyllite Group'-AB4[Si8O22]X · 8H2O
'Biotite'-K(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
'Columbite-(Fe)-Columbite-(Mn) Series'-
'Cymatolite'-
'Garnet Group'-X3Z2(SiO4)3
'Gummite' ?-
'Heulandite Subgroup'-
'Hornblende'-
'Limonite'-
'Manganese Oxides'-
'var. Manganese Dendrites'-
'Pyroxene Group'-ADSi2O6
'Scapolite'-
'Stilbite Subgroup'-M6-7[Al8-9Si27-28O72] · nH2O
'Tourmaline'-AD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
'var. Verdelite'-A(D3)G6(T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z

List of minerals for each chemical element

HHydrogen
H Dickinsonite-(KMnNa)(KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn132+Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
H TriploiditeMn22+(PO4)(OH)
H Reddingite(Mn2+,Fe2+)3(PO4)2 · 3H2O
H FairfielditeCa2Mn2+(PO4)2 · 2H2O
H EosphoriteMn2+Al(PO4)(OH)2 · H2O
H MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
H NatroliteNa2Al2Si3O10 · 2H2O
H SchorlNaFe32+Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
H Meta-autuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 6H2O
H MetatorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 8H2O
H StauroliteFe22+Al9Si4O23(OH)
H Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
H BertranditeBe4(Si2O7)(OH)2
H Zircon var. CyrtoliteZr[(SiO4),(OH)4]
H Opal var. Opal-ANSiO2 · nH2O
H Montmorillonite(Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2(Si4O10)(OH)2 · nH2O
H PhosphuranyliteKCa(H3O)3(UO2)7(PO4)4O4 · 8H2O
H Stilbite SubgroupM6-7[Al8-9Si27-28O72] · nH2O
H MitridatiteCa2Fe33+(PO4)3O2 · 3H2O
H MetaswitzeriteMn32+(PO4)2 · 4H2O
H HarmotomeBa2(Si12Al4)O32 · 12H2O
H Clinozoisite(CaCa)(AlAlAl)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
H Fluorapatite var. Manganese-bearing Fluorapatite(Ca,Mn2+)5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) or Ca5([P,Mn5+]O4)3(F,Cl,OH)
H Chabazite-Ca(Ca,K2,Na2)2[Al2Si4O12]2 · 12H2O
H MesoliteNa2Ca2Si9Al6O30 · 8H2O
H Goethiteα-Fe3+O(OH)
H AutuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 10-12H2O
H TorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 12H2O
H ApatiteCa5(PO4)3(Cl/F/OH)
H HydroxylapatiteCa5(PO4)3(OH)
H Apophyllite GroupAB4[Si8O22]X · 8H2O
H MelanteriteFe2+(H2O)6SO4 · H2O
H BiotiteK(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
H OpalSiO2 · nH2O
H Actinolite◻Ca2(Mg4.5-2.5Fe0.5-2.5)Si8O22(OH)2
H HureauliteMn52+(PO3OH)2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
H UranophaneCa(UO2)2(SiO3OH)2 · 5H2O
H VivianiteFe32+(PO4)2 · 8H2O
H MontebrasiteLiAl(PO4)(OH)
H AnniteKFe32+(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
H ElbaiteNa(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
H LazuliteMgAl2(PO4)2(OH)2
H LandesiteMn2+3-xFex3+(PO4)2(OH)x · (3-x)H2O
H XanthoxeniteCa4Fe23+(PO4)4(OH)2 · 3H2O
H BrazilianiteNaAl3(PO4)2(OH)4
H Muscovite var. DamouriteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
H SwitzeriteMn32+(PO4)2 · 7H2O
H TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
LiLithium
Li EucryptiteLiAlSiO4
Li LithiophiliteLiMn2+PO4
Li SpodumeneLiAlSi2O6
Li Spodumene var. KunziteLiAlSi2O6
Li Lithiophilite var. SickleriteLi1-x(Mnx3+Mn2+1-x)PO4
Li TriphyliteLiFe2+PO4
Li MontebrasiteLiAl(PO4)(OH)
Li ElbaiteNa(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Li AmblygoniteLiAl(PO4)F
BeBeryllium
Be Beryl var. AquamarineBe3Al2Si6O18
Be BertranditeBe4(Si2O7)(OH)2
Be Beryl var. GosheniteBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Be Beryl var. HeliodorBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Be BerylBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Be Beryl var. MorganiteBe3Al2(Si6O18)
BBoron
B SchorlNaFe32+Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
B TourmalineAD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
B Tourmaline var. VerdeliteA(D3)G6(T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
B ElbaiteNa(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
CCarbon
C RhodochrositeMnCO3
C CalciteCaCO3
C GraphiteC
C Bismutite(BiO)2CO3
C CerussitePbCO3
OOxygen
O Dickinsonite-(KMnNa)(KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn132+Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
O EucryptiteLiAlSiO4
O TriploiditeMn22+(PO4)(OH)
O LithiophiliteLiMn2+PO4
O Reddingite(Mn2+,Fe2+)3(PO4)2 · 3H2O
O NatrophiliteNaMn2+PO4
O FairfielditeCa2Mn2+(PO4)2 · 2H2O
O FillowiteNa3CaMn112+(PO4)9
O EosphoriteMn2+Al(PO4)(OH)2 · H2O
O Albite var. CleavelanditeNa(AlSi3O8)
O AlbiteNa(AlSi3O8)
O SpodumeneLiAlSi2O6
O MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
O AlmandineFe32+Al2(SiO4)3
O NatroliteNa2Al2Si3O10 · 2H2O
O Grossular var. HessoniteCa3Al2(SiO4)3
O Columbite-(Fe)Fe2+Nb2O6
O GrossularCa3Al2(SiO4)3
O RhodochrositeMnCO3
O FluorapatiteCa5(PO4)3F
O SchorlNaFe32+Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
O Albite var. Oligoclase(Na,Ca)[Al(Si,Al)Si2O8]
O Quartz var. Smoky QuartzSiO2
O ZirconZr(SiO4)
O UraniniteUO2
O Meta-autuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 6H2O
O MetatorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 8H2O
O PurpuriteMn3+(PO4)
O ForsteriteMg2SiO4
O CalciteCaCO3
O StauroliteFe22+Al9Si4O23(OH)
O MagnetiteFe2+Fe23+O4
O MicroclineK(AlSi3O8)
O Pyroxene GroupADSi2O6
O QuartzSiO2
O TourmalineAD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
O Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
O Beryl var. AquamarineBe3Al2Si6O18
O Spodumene var. KunziteLiAlSi2O6
O BertranditeBe4(Si2O7)(OH)2
O Bismutite(BiO)2CO3
O CerussitePbCO3
O Zircon var. CyrtoliteZr[(SiO4),(OH)4]
O SpessartineMn32+Al2(SiO4)3
O Beryl var. GosheniteBe3Al2(Si6O18)
O Beryl var. HeliodorBe3Al2(Si6O18)
O HematiteFe2O3
O Opal var. Opal-ANSiO2 · nH2O
O Montmorillonite(Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2(Si4O10)(OH)2 · nH2O
O PhosphuranyliteKCa(H3O)3(UO2)7(PO4)4O4 · 8H2O
O Lithiophilite var. SickleriteLi1-x(Mnx3+Mn2+1-x)PO4
O Stilbite SubgroupM6-7[Al8-9Si27-28O72] · nH2O
O MitridatiteCa2Fe33+(PO4)3O2 · 3H2O
O MetaswitzeriteMn32+(PO4)2 · 4H2O
O HarmotomeBa2(Si12Al4)O32 · 12H2O
O Clinozoisite(CaCa)(AlAlAl)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
O Fluorapatite var. Manganese-bearing Fluorapatite(Ca,Mn2+)5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) or Ca5([P,Mn5+]O4)3(F,Cl,OH)
O Chabazite-Ca(Ca,K2,Na2)2[Al2Si4O12]2 · 12H2O
O MesoliteNa2Ca2Si9Al6O30 · 8H2O
O Goethiteα-Fe3+O(OH)
O Tourmaline var. VerdeliteA(D3)G6(T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
O AutuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 10-12H2O
O TorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 12H2O
O Tantalite-(Mn)Mn2+Ta2O6
O ApatiteCa5(PO4)3(Cl/F/OH)
O Garnet GroupX3Z2(SiO4)3
O HydroxylapatiteCa5(PO4)3(OH)
O Quartz var. Rose QuartzSiO2
O DiopsideCaMgSi2O6
O Apophyllite GroupAB4[Si8O22]X · 8H2O
O MelanteriteFe2+(H2O)6SO4 · H2O
O SillimaniteAl2(SiO4)O
O BiotiteK(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
O TriphyliteLiFe2+PO4
O OpalSiO2 · nH2O
O Actinolite◻Ca2(Mg4.5-2.5Fe0.5-2.5)Si8O22(OH)2
O BerylBe3Al2(Si6O18)
O HureauliteMn52+(PO3OH)2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
O Beryl var. MorganiteBe3Al2(Si6O18)
O Samarskite-(Y)YFe3+Nb2O8
O UranophaneCa(UO2)2(SiO3OH)2 · 5H2O
O VivianiteFe32+(PO4)2 · 8H2O
O WulfenitePb(MoO4)
O MontebrasiteLiAl(PO4)(OH)
O AnniteKFe32+(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
O TitaniteCaTi(SiO4)O
O IlmeniteFe2+TiO3
O ElbaiteNa(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
O LazuliteMgAl2(PO4)2(OH)2
O LandesiteMn2+3-xFex3+(PO4)2(OH)x · (3-x)H2O
O XanthoxeniteCa4Fe23+(PO4)4(OH)2 · 3H2O
O PyromorphitePb5(PO4)3Cl
O Alluaudite(Na,Ca)Mn2+(Fe3+,Mn2+,Fe2+,Mg)2(PO4)3
O BrazilianiteNaAl3(PO4)2(OH)4
O Muscovite var. DamouriteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
O PyrolusiteMn4+O2
O TripliteMn22+(PO4)F
O SwitzeriteMn32+(PO4)2 · 7H2O
O Heterosite(Fe3+,Mn3+)PO4
O AmblygoniteLiAl(PO4)F
O TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
FFluorine
F FluorapatiteCa5(PO4)3F
F FluoriteCaF2
F Fluorite var. ChlorophaneCaF2
F Fluorapatite var. Manganese-bearing Fluorapatite(Ca,Mn2+)5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) or Ca5([P,Mn5+]O4)3(F,Cl,OH)
F ApatiteCa5(PO4)3(Cl/F/OH)
F BiotiteK(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
F TripliteMn22+(PO4)F
F AmblygoniteLiAl(PO4)F
F TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
NaSodium
Na Dickinsonite-(KMnNa)(KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn132+Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
Na NatrophiliteNaMn2+PO4
Na FillowiteNa3CaMn112+(PO4)9
Na Albite var. CleavelanditeNa(AlSi3O8)
Na AlbiteNa(AlSi3O8)
Na NatroliteNa2Al2Si3O10 · 2H2O
Na SchorlNaFe32+Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Na Albite var. Oligoclase(Na,Ca)[Al(Si,Al)Si2O8]
Na Montmorillonite(Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2(Si4O10)(OH)2 · nH2O
Na Chabazite-Ca(Ca,K2,Na2)2[Al2Si4O12]2 · 12H2O
Na MesoliteNa2Ca2Si9Al6O30 · 8H2O
Na ElbaiteNa(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Na Alluaudite(Na,Ca)Mn2+(Fe3+,Mn2+,Fe2+,Mg)2(PO4)3
Na BrazilianiteNaAl3(PO4)2(OH)4
MgMagnesium
Mg ForsteriteMg2SiO4
Mg Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
Mg Montmorillonite(Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2(Si4O10)(OH)2 · nH2O
Mg DiopsideCaMgSi2O6
Mg BiotiteK(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
Mg Actinolite◻Ca2(Mg4.5-2.5Fe0.5-2.5)Si8O22(OH)2
Mg LazuliteMgAl2(PO4)2(OH)2
Mg Alluaudite(Na,Ca)Mn2+(Fe3+,Mn2+,Fe2+,Mg)2(PO4)3
AlAluminium
Al Dickinsonite-(KMnNa)(KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn132+Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
Al EucryptiteLiAlSiO4
Al EosphoriteMn2+Al(PO4)(OH)2 · H2O
Al Albite var. CleavelanditeNa(AlSi3O8)
Al AlbiteNa(AlSi3O8)
Al SpodumeneLiAlSi2O6
Al MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Al AlmandineFe32+Al2(SiO4)3
Al NatroliteNa2Al2Si3O10 · 2H2O
Al Grossular var. HessoniteCa3Al2(SiO4)3
Al GrossularCa3Al2(SiO4)3
Al SchorlNaFe32+Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Al Albite var. Oligoclase(Na,Ca)[Al(Si,Al)Si2O8]
Al StauroliteFe22+Al9Si4O23(OH)
Al MicroclineK(AlSi3O8)
Al Beryl var. AquamarineBe3Al2Si6O18
Al Spodumene var. KunziteLiAlSi2O6
Al SpessartineMn32+Al2(SiO4)3
Al Beryl var. GosheniteBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Al Beryl var. HeliodorBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Al Montmorillonite(Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2(Si4O10)(OH)2 · nH2O
Al Stilbite SubgroupM6-7[Al8-9Si27-28O72] · nH2O
Al HarmotomeBa2(Si12Al4)O32 · 12H2O
Al Clinozoisite(CaCa)(AlAlAl)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Al Chabazite-Ca(Ca,K2,Na2)2[Al2Si4O12]2 · 12H2O
Al MesoliteNa2Ca2Si9Al6O30 · 8H2O
Al SillimaniteAl2(SiO4)O
Al BiotiteK(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
Al BerylBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Al Beryl var. MorganiteBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Al MontebrasiteLiAl(PO4)(OH)
Al AnniteKFe32+(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Al ElbaiteNa(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Al LazuliteMgAl2(PO4)2(OH)2
Al BrazilianiteNaAl3(PO4)2(OH)4
Al Muscovite var. DamouriteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Al AmblygoniteLiAl(PO4)F
Al TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
SiSilicon
Si EucryptiteLiAlSiO4
Si Albite var. CleavelanditeNa(AlSi3O8)
Si AlbiteNa(AlSi3O8)
Si SpodumeneLiAlSi2O6
Si MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Si AlmandineFe32+Al2(SiO4)3
Si NatroliteNa2Al2Si3O10 · 2H2O
Si Grossular var. HessoniteCa3Al2(SiO4)3
Si GrossularCa3Al2(SiO4)3
Si SchorlNaFe32+Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Si Albite var. Oligoclase(Na,Ca)[Al(Si,Al)Si2O8]
Si Quartz var. Smoky QuartzSiO2
Si ZirconZr(SiO4)
Si ForsteriteMg2SiO4
Si StauroliteFe22+Al9Si4O23(OH)
Si MicroclineK(AlSi3O8)
Si Pyroxene GroupADSi2O6
Si QuartzSiO2
Si Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
Si Beryl var. AquamarineBe3Al2Si6O18
Si Spodumene var. KunziteLiAlSi2O6
Si BertranditeBe4(Si2O7)(OH)2
Si Zircon var. CyrtoliteZr[(SiO4),(OH)4]
Si SpessartineMn32+Al2(SiO4)3
Si Beryl var. GosheniteBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Si Beryl var. HeliodorBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Si Opal var. Opal-ANSiO2 · nH2O
Si Montmorillonite(Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2(Si4O10)(OH)2 · nH2O
Si Stilbite SubgroupM6-7[Al8-9Si27-28O72] · nH2O
Si HarmotomeBa2(Si12Al4)O32 · 12H2O
Si Clinozoisite(CaCa)(AlAlAl)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Si Chabazite-Ca(Ca,K2,Na2)2[Al2Si4O12]2 · 12H2O
Si MesoliteNa2Ca2Si9Al6O30 · 8H2O
Si Garnet GroupX3Z2(SiO4)3
Si Quartz var. Rose QuartzSiO2
Si DiopsideCaMgSi2O6
Si Apophyllite GroupAB4[Si8O22]X · 8H2O
Si SillimaniteAl2(SiO4)O
Si BiotiteK(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
Si OpalSiO2 · nH2O
Si Actinolite◻Ca2(Mg4.5-2.5Fe0.5-2.5)Si8O22(OH)2
Si BerylBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Si Beryl var. MorganiteBe3Al2(Si6O18)
Si UranophaneCa(UO2)2(SiO3OH)2 · 5H2O
Si AnniteKFe32+(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Si TitaniteCaTi(SiO4)O
Si ElbaiteNa(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Si Muscovite var. DamouriteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Si TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
PPhosphorus
P Dickinsonite-(KMnNa)(KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn132+Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
P TriploiditeMn22+(PO4)(OH)
P LithiophiliteLiMn2+PO4
P Reddingite(Mn2+,Fe2+)3(PO4)2 · 3H2O
P NatrophiliteNaMn2+PO4
P FairfielditeCa2Mn2+(PO4)2 · 2H2O
P FillowiteNa3CaMn112+(PO4)9
P EosphoriteMn2+Al(PO4)(OH)2 · H2O
P FluorapatiteCa5(PO4)3F
P Meta-autuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 6H2O
P MetatorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 8H2O
P PurpuriteMn3+(PO4)
P PhosphuranyliteKCa(H3O)3(UO2)7(PO4)4O4 · 8H2O
P Lithiophilite var. SickleriteLi1-x(Mnx3+Mn2+1-x)PO4
P MitridatiteCa2Fe33+(PO4)3O2 · 3H2O
P MetaswitzeriteMn32+(PO4)2 · 4H2O
P Fluorapatite var. Manganese-bearing Fluorapatite(Ca,Mn2+)5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) or Ca5([P,Mn5+]O4)3(F,Cl,OH)
P AutuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 10-12H2O
P TorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 12H2O
P ApatiteCa5(PO4)3(Cl/F/OH)
P HydroxylapatiteCa5(PO4)3(OH)
P TriphyliteLiFe2+PO4
P HureauliteMn52+(PO3OH)2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
P VivianiteFe32+(PO4)2 · 8H2O
P MontebrasiteLiAl(PO4)(OH)
P LazuliteMgAl2(PO4)2(OH)2
P LandesiteMn2+3-xFex3+(PO4)2(OH)x · (3-x)H2O
P XanthoxeniteCa4Fe23+(PO4)4(OH)2 · 3H2O
P PyromorphitePb5(PO4)3Cl
P Alluaudite(Na,Ca)Mn2+(Fe3+,Mn2+,Fe2+,Mg)2(PO4)3
P BrazilianiteNaAl3(PO4)2(OH)4
P TripliteMn22+(PO4)F
P SwitzeriteMn32+(PO4)2 · 7H2O
P Heterosite(Fe3+,Mn3+)PO4
P AmblygoniteLiAl(PO4)F
SSulfur
S PyriteFeS2
S MarcasiteFeS2
S MelanteriteFe2+(H2O)6SO4 · H2O
S GreenockiteCdS
S SphaleriteZnS
S ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
ClChlorine
Cl Fluorapatite var. Manganese-bearing Fluorapatite(Ca,Mn2+)5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) or Ca5([P,Mn5+]O4)3(F,Cl,OH)
Cl ApatiteCa5(PO4)3(Cl/F/OH)
Cl PyromorphitePb5(PO4)3Cl
KPotassium
K Dickinsonite-(KMnNa)(KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn132+Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
K MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
K MicroclineK(AlSi3O8)
K PhosphuranyliteKCa(H3O)3(UO2)7(PO4)4O4 · 8H2O
K Chabazite-Ca(Ca,K2,Na2)2[Al2Si4O12]2 · 12H2O
K BiotiteK(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
K AnniteKFe32+(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
K Muscovite var. DamouriteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
CaCalcium
Ca Dickinsonite-(KMnNa)(KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn132+Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
Ca FairfielditeCa2Mn2+(PO4)2 · 2H2O
Ca FillowiteNa3CaMn112+(PO4)9
Ca Grossular var. HessoniteCa3Al2(SiO4)3
Ca GrossularCa3Al2(SiO4)3
Ca FluorapatiteCa5(PO4)3F
Ca FluoriteCaF2
Ca Albite var. Oligoclase(Na,Ca)[Al(Si,Al)Si2O8]
Ca Meta-autuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 6H2O
Ca CalciteCaCO3
Ca Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
Ca Fluorite var. ChlorophaneCaF2
Ca Montmorillonite(Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2(Si4O10)(OH)2 · nH2O
Ca PhosphuranyliteKCa(H3O)3(UO2)7(PO4)4O4 · 8H2O
Ca MitridatiteCa2Fe33+(PO4)3O2 · 3H2O
Ca Clinozoisite(CaCa)(AlAlAl)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Ca Fluorapatite var. Manganese-bearing Fluorapatite(Ca,Mn2+)5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) or Ca5([P,Mn5+]O4)3(F,Cl,OH)
Ca Chabazite-Ca(Ca,K2,Na2)2[Al2Si4O12]2 · 12H2O
Ca MesoliteNa2Ca2Si9Al6O30 · 8H2O
Ca AutuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 10-12H2O
Ca ApatiteCa5(PO4)3(Cl/F/OH)
Ca HydroxylapatiteCa5(PO4)3(OH)
Ca DiopsideCaMgSi2O6
Ca Actinolite◻Ca2(Mg4.5-2.5Fe0.5-2.5)Si8O22(OH)2
Ca UranophaneCa(UO2)2(SiO3OH)2 · 5H2O
Ca TitaniteCaTi(SiO4)O
Ca XanthoxeniteCa4Fe23+(PO4)4(OH)2 · 3H2O
Ca Alluaudite(Na,Ca)Mn2+(Fe3+,Mn2+,Fe2+,Mg)2(PO4)3
TiTitanium
Ti BiotiteK(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
Ti TitaniteCaTi(SiO4)O
Ti IlmeniteFe2+TiO3
MnManganese
Mn Dickinsonite-(KMnNa)(KNa)(Mn2+◻)Ca(Na2Na)Mn132+Al(PO4)11(PO4)(OH)2
Mn TriploiditeMn22+(PO4)(OH)
Mn LithiophiliteLiMn2+PO4
Mn Reddingite(Mn2+,Fe2+)3(PO4)2 · 3H2O
Mn NatrophiliteNaMn2+PO4
Mn FairfielditeCa2Mn2+(PO4)2 · 2H2O
Mn FillowiteNa3CaMn112+(PO4)9
Mn EosphoriteMn2+Al(PO4)(OH)2 · H2O
Mn RhodochrositeMnCO3
Mn PurpuriteMn3+(PO4)
Mn SpessartineMn32+Al2(SiO4)3
Mn Lithiophilite var. SickleriteLi1-x(Mnx3+Mn2+1-x)PO4
Mn MetaswitzeriteMn32+(PO4)2 · 4H2O
Mn Fluorapatite var. Manganese-bearing Fluorapatite(Ca,Mn2+)5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH) or Ca5([P,Mn5+]O4)3(F,Cl,OH)
Mn Tantalite-(Mn)Mn2+Ta2O6
Mn HureauliteMn52+(PO3OH)2(PO4)2 · 4H2O
Mn LandesiteMn2+3-xFex3+(PO4)2(OH)x · (3-x)H2O
Mn Alluaudite(Na,Ca)Mn2+(Fe3+,Mn2+,Fe2+,Mg)2(PO4)3
Mn PyrolusiteMn4+O2
Mn TripliteMn22+(PO4)F
Mn SwitzeriteMn32+(PO4)2 · 7H2O
Mn Heterosite(Fe3+,Mn3+)PO4
FeIron
Fe Reddingite(Mn2+,Fe2+)3(PO4)2 · 3H2O
Fe AlmandineFe32+Al2(SiO4)3
Fe Columbite-(Fe)Fe2+Nb2O6
Fe SchorlNaFe32+Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH)
Fe PyriteFeS2
Fe StauroliteFe22+Al9Si4O23(OH)
Fe MagnetiteFe2+Fe23+O4
Fe HematiteFe2O3
Fe MarcasiteFeS2
Fe MitridatiteCa2Fe33+(PO4)3O2 · 3H2O
Fe Goethiteα-Fe3+O(OH)
Fe MelanteriteFe2+(H2O)6SO4 · H2O
Fe BiotiteK(Fe2+/Mg)2(Al/Fe3+/Mg/Ti)([Si/Al/Fe]2Si2O10)(OH/F)2 or Simplified: K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
Fe TriphyliteLiFe2+PO4
Fe Actinolite◻Ca2(Mg4.5-2.5Fe0.5-2.5)Si8O22(OH)2
Fe Samarskite-(Y)YFe3+Nb2O8
Fe VivianiteFe32+(PO4)2 · 8H2O
Fe AnniteKFe32+(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Fe IlmeniteFe2+TiO3
Fe ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
Fe LandesiteMn2+3-xFex3+(PO4)2(OH)x · (3-x)H2O
Fe XanthoxeniteCa4Fe23+(PO4)4(OH)2 · 3H2O
Fe Alluaudite(Na,Ca)Mn2+(Fe3+,Mn2+,Fe2+,Mg)2(PO4)3
Fe Heterosite(Fe3+,Mn3+)PO4
CuCopper
Cu MetatorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 8H2O
Cu TorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 12H2O
Cu ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
ZnZinc
Zn SphaleriteZnS
YYttrium
Y Samarskite-(Y)YFe3+Nb2O8
ZrZirconium
Zr ZirconZr(SiO4)
Zr Zircon var. CyrtoliteZr[(SiO4),(OH)4]
NbNiobium
Nb Columbite-(Fe)Fe2+Nb2O6
Nb Samarskite-(Y)YFe3+Nb2O8
MoMolybdenum
Mo WulfenitePb(MoO4)
CdCadmium
Cd GreenockiteCdS
BaBarium
Ba HarmotomeBa2(Si12Al4)O32 · 12H2O
TaTantalum
Ta Microlite GroupA2-mTa2X6-wZ-n
Ta Tantalite-(Mn)Mn2+Ta2O6
PbLead
Pb CerussitePbCO3
Pb WulfenitePb(MoO4)
Pb PyromorphitePb5(PO4)3Cl
BiBismuth
Bi BismuthBi
Bi Bismutite(BiO)2CO3
UUranium
U UraniniteUO2
U Meta-autuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 6H2O
U MetatorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 8H2O
U PhosphuranyliteKCa(H3O)3(UO2)7(PO4)4O4 · 8H2O
U AutuniteCa(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 10-12H2O
U TorberniteCu(UO2)2(PO4)2 · 12H2O
U UranophaneCa(UO2)2(SiO3OH)2 · 5H2O

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References

 
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