Descloizite
| Descloizite | |
|---|---|
| 
 
 Descloizite specimen from Berg Aukas (Berg Aukus), Namibia, 9.5 x 8.9 x 4.9 cm  | |
| General | |
| Category | Vanadate mineral | 
| Formula  (repeating unit)  | (Pb,Zn)2VO4OH | 
| Strunz classification | 08.BH.40 | 
| Crystal symmetry | Orthorhombic (2/m 2/m 2/m) - dipyramidal | 
| Unit cell | a = 7.593 Å, b = 6.057 Å, c = 9.416 Å; Z = 4 | 
| Identification | |
| Color | Brownish red, red-orange, reddish to blackish brown, nearly black | 
| Crystal habit | Zoned tabular crystals common, encrustations and plumose aggregates | 
| Crystal system | Orthorhombic | 
| Cleavage | None | 
| Fracture | Irregular, sub-conchoidal | 
| Tenacity | Brittle | 
| Mohs scale hardness | 3 - 3.5 | 
| Luster | Greasy | 
| Streak | Orange to brownish red | 
| Diaphaneity | Transparent to opaque | 
| Specific gravity | 6.1 - 6.2 | 
| Optical properties | Biaxial (-) | 
| Refractive index | nα = 2.185 nβ = 2.265 nγ = 2.350 | 
| Birefringence | δ = 0.165 | 
| Pleochroism | Visible | 
| 2V angle | 85° to 90° | 
| Dispersion | Strong r > v rarely r < v | 
| References | [1][2][3] | 
Descloizite is a rare mineral species consisting of basic lead and zinc vanadate, (Pb,Zn)2(OH)VO4, crystallizing in the orthorhombic crystal system and isomorphous with olivenite.[4] Appreciable gallium and germanium may also be incorporated into the crystal structure.
The color is deep cherry-red to brown or black, and the crystals are transparent or translucent with a greasy lustre; the streak is orange-yellow to brown; specific gravity 5.9 to 6.2; hardness 31/2. A variety known as cuprodescloizite is dull green in color; it contains a considerable amount of copper replacing zinc and some arsenic replacing vanadium.[4] There is also an arsenate analogue called arsendescloizite.[5]
Discovery and occurrence

It was discovered in the Sierra de Córdoba deposit in Córdoba, Argentina in 1854 and named in honor of the French mineralogist Alfred Des Cloizeaux (1817–1897).[1] It occurs as small prismatic or pyramidal crystals, usually forming drusy crusts and stalactitic aggregates; also as fibrous encrusting masses with a mammillary surface.[4]
Descloizite occurs in oxidised portions of veins of lead ores in association with pyromorphite, vanadinite, wulfenite, mottramite, mimetite and cerussite.[3]
The Otavi ("O-tarvi") Mountainland of northern Namibia was once considered home to the greatest vanadium deposits in the world, including those at Berg Aukas ("OW-cuss"), Abenab ("UB-en-ub"), Baltika ("BUL-tika") and Uitsab ("ATE-sub").[6] Descloizite and mottramite were the main ore minerals in each of these deposits, which are now exhausted. Other localities are the Sierra de Cordoba in Argentina; Lake Valley in Sierra County, New Mexico; Arizona; Phoenixville in Pennsylvania and Obir, Carinthia Austria.
References
- 1 2 Mindat.org
 - ↑ Webmineral data
 - 1 2 Handbook of Mineralogy
 - 1 2 3  
 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Descloizite". Encyclopædia Britannica 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 91. - ↑ Arsendescloizite on Mindat.org
 - ↑ Boni et al., 2007, Genesis of vanadium ores in the Otavi Mountainland, Namibia. Economic Geology v.102 p.441-469.
 
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to Descloizite. | 
