A radioactive mineral from Mozambique related to davidite
- 1 June 1950
- journal article
- Published by Mineralogical Society in Mineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society
- Vol. 29 (209) , 101-112
- https://doi.org/10.1180/minmag.1950.029.209.02
Abstract
Early in 1947 a black, opaque, radioactive mineral resembling samarskite in appearance was discovered at Mavnzi in the Tete distrier of Mozambique, Portuguese East Africa. Two small specimens, one a rough twinned crystal with trigonal symmetry (fig. 3), were sent by h. M. Macgregor; then Director of the Geological Survey of Southern Rhodesia, to the British Museum (Natural History) for investigation, and a chemical analysis by E. Golding (table I, no. 2) followed later in the same year. X-ray photographs of fragments and powder from both specimens were taken, but revealed on development no diffraction spots, lines, or haloes. Only after prolonged heat-treatment could powder lines characteristic of crystalline material be obtained. The metamict nature of the mineral before heat-treatment is not unexpected in view of its chemical composition, optical isotropy, and glassy fracture.Keywords
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