(Zn,Mn2+)Mn4+3O7.1-2H2O
Monoclinic
Woodruffite was first described from Sterling Hill by Frondel (1953) and was included in the study of Potter and Rossman (1979). It has not been reported from Franklin.
Woodruffite occurs as massive, very fine- grained masses and crusts with a mammillary to botryoidal surface. It has a dull luster and is opaque and black to brown. Concentric layering is common, and the hardness varies substantially, from 4½ to 1, the latter in pulverent brown massive material. The density is 3.71 g/cm3 (Frondel, 1953). In reflected light, woodruffite is moderately reflective (R = about 25% in air), distinctly bireflectant, and strongly anisotropic (Ramdohr, 1980). No quantitative optical data are known. Woodruffite resembles todorokite and other massive Mn-oxides; identification is best done employing X-ray methods. Woodruffite was not studied by the writer.
Woodruffite is a zinc manganese oxide hydrate mineral and is likely the Zn-analogue of todorokite. Frondel (1953) gave the composition as Na2O 0.06, K2O 0.55, BaO 0.12, MgO 0.62, ZnO 13.89, MnO 7.88, MnO2 64.27, Fe2O3 0.26, Al2O3 0.14, SiO2 0.86, H2O 10.48, total = 99.13 wt. %. No recent analytical studies have been done.
Woodruffite is known from the mud zone at Sterling Hill, mined as the Noble and Passaic Mines in the 1870s and noted for the abundance of hemimorphite and secondary manganese minerals. Woodruffite occurs as dense masses, intimately associated with chalcophanite and residual franklinite. Confirmed specimens are sparse, but some material probably exists mislabeled in systematic and private collections.
Woodruffite was named for Samuel Woodruff, a miner who was instrumental in preserving many significant specimens.
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| Copyright © 1995 by Pete J. Dunn |
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