Montbrayite

Montbrayite
Montbrayite (Montbray, Quebec)
General
CategorySulfosalt minerals
Formula
(repeating unit)
(Au,Ag,Sb,Bi,Pb)23(Te,Sb,Bi,Pb)38
or (Au,Sb)2Te3[1]
IMA symbolMnb[1]
Strunz classification2.DB.20[2]
Crystal systemTriclinic
Crystal classPlumbotelluride
Identification
Colorcream, yellowish white,[3] very light yellow[1]
Crystal habitsmall segregations, rarely exceeding 3-5 mm, crystals very rare
Twinningobserved
Cleavagevery good {110}, {011}, {111}
Fractureirregular to uneven, sub-conchoidal, the mineral is very fragile
Tenacityvery brittle
Mohs scale hardness2.5
Lustermetallic[1]
Diaphaneityopaque[3]
Density9.94 (measured)
Pleochroismvery weak[3]

Montbrayite (from a Canadian toponym) is a very rare mineral from among the gold tellurides, close to krennerite and calaverite, in composition it is a mixed polymetallic plumbotelluride of gold with a variable formula, initially written as Au2Te3,[4]: 20–21  or (Au,Sb)2Te3,[1] but today having a much more complex form in the calculated form: (Au,Ag,Sb,Bi,Pb)23(Te,Sb,Bi,Pb)38. The color of montbrayite is cream, tin-white to pale yellow, the luster is metallic.

  1. ^ a b c d e Montbrayite (A valid IMA mineral species, grandfathered): information about the mineral montbrayite in the Mindat database.
  2. ^ Montbrayite on the website Mineralienatlas (in German)
  3. ^ a b c John W. Anthony, Richard A. Bideaux, Kenneth W. Bladh, Monte C. Nichols (Hrsg.): Handbook of Mineralogy, Mineralogical Society of America. 2001. — Montbrayite.
  4. ^ O. M. Shubnikova. New mineral species and varieties discovered in 1945-1949. Proceedings of the Institute of Geological Sciences. Issue 144, mineralogical and geochemical series (No. 16). — Moscow: USSR Academy of Sciences Publishing House, 1953. — 155 p. (in Russian)