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Evansite : Al3(PO4)(OH)6·6H2O

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Copyright © Rock Currier
 
 
 
 
minID: D74-ML8

Evansite : Al3(PO4)(OH)6·6H2O

Copyright © Rock Currier  - This image is copyrighted. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

Evansite specimen. Specimen has been x-rayed twice and found to be amorphous and aluminium and phosphorus dominate its composition. The scale at the bottom of the image is an inch with a rule at one cm.

This photo has been shown 363 times
Photo added:14th Jul 2013
Dimensions:3101x2295px (7.12 megapixels)
Camera:CANON EOS 5D

Data Identifiers

Mindat Photo ID:546752 📋 (quote this with any query about this photo)
Long-form Identifier:mindat:1:4:546752:2 📋
GUID:c776f8ab-1831-4675-90e4-d486187b973b 📋
Specimen MinIDD74-ML8 (note: this is not unique to this photo, it is unique to the specimen)

Discuss this Photo

PhotosEvansite - Wenshan Autonomous Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China

10th Oct 2013 01:41 UTCMichael Hatskel

Hi Rock,

Based on the analytical results you mentioned in the specimen description, is it correct to conclude that all of the blue, "bubbly" Chinese specimens labelled as Gibbsite are likely to be Evansite?

And what is giving it its blue color?


Do you know of any other analyses of that material, especially the published analyses? In particular, do you know of any analyses (chemical or XRD) that actually confirmed the Gibbsite?


Thanks in advance.

Michael

10th Oct 2013 10:15 UTCGaël Trouilliez

09885760016018026322548.jpg



Hi all,


I do not know this chinese material, but I find it quite resembling this.

It is an Evansite specimen from St-Aubin les Châteaux, western France.

Specimens like this have been analysed and really proved to be Evansite.

Sorry for the poor photo, it was made on a hurry, it can be guessed that true color is much more blue than on the photo.

Matrix is massive Pyrite, so the strong blue color may be due to small Cu amounts (common in Pyrite).

Perhaps this Chinese material due its color to the same reason ?


Friendly,


Gaël

10th Oct 2013 11:39 UTCRock Currier Expert

The two x-rays I had done on the material we got in our lot, both showed it to be amorphous. I was hoping for a gibsite pattern, but they were amorphous so we had to settle for evansite. I know of no published analyses for the material.

10th Oct 2013 14:15 UTCMichael Hatskel

Thanks, Rock.

I was always very skeptical about those blue bubbles being Gibbsite, especially when the specimen is claimed to come from a bauxite deposit. Yet that bubbly "Gibbsite" is all over the eBay.


Gael,

Thanks for your input. Al-phosphate (or a mixed Al-phosphate/sulfate) makes perfect sense in the Pyrite oxidation areas.
 
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