THE MINERAL WOODHOUSEITE


Woodhouseite is a rare mineral that is almost exclusively from a single location at Champion Andalusite Mine on the western slopes of the White Mountain Peak in Mono County, California. It forms flesh-colored to colorless pseudocubic rhombohedrons. The crystals can look nearly cubic, but the angles between the faces are not exactly 90 degrees as is required for a true cube. Wedge-shaped crystals and distorted and modified rhombohedrons are also seen. Faces tend to be curved and striated. It forms in quartz veins with topaz, tourmaline, andalusite and svanbergite, another rare phosphate-sulfate mineral.

Woodhouseite is a difficult mineral to classify in that it has both a phosphate anion group and a sulfate anion group. The phosphate anion group would normally dictate that woodhouseite be classified in the Phosphate Class of minerals. But woodhouseite's sulfate anion is intricate and essential in its structure, while the phosphate anions can be substituted for to at least a limited degree. Some other classification schemes may place woodhouseite in the Phosphate Class however.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS:

 

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