Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T05:36:41.709Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Childrenite in South-West England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2018

R. S. W. Braithwaite
Affiliation:
Chemistry Department, University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, Manchester M60 1QD
B. V. Cooper
Affiliation:
Chemistry Department, University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, Manchester M60 1QD

Synopsis

Childrenite (Fe,Mn)AlPO4,(OH)2.2H2O, the iron-rich end-member of the childrenite-eosphorite diadochic series, was first discovered by Brooke (1823) on specimens from near Tavistock in Devon. Subsequently it has been recorded from a small number of other British localities, mostly in the Tavistock area, and also from near St. Austell in Cornwall, and from one locality in Cumbria. The Sir Arthur Russell collection, now in the British Museum (Nat. Hist.), has specimens from a few additional localities, all near Tavistock, and the Geological Museum, Institute of Geological Sciences, has a specimen from Wheal Jane, near Truro.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1982

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Reference

Brooke, H. J. A. (1823) Q. J. Lit. Sci. Art. London, 16, 274-5.Google Scholar

References

Allan, (R.), 1854. Manual of Mineralogy, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Ames, (L.L. Jnr.), 1959. Econ. Geol., 54, 829841.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barclay et al MSS. Private notes, held in The Institute of Geological Sciences: Barclay, (C. F.) and Toll, (R. W.), 1922. Report on Russell United mine.Google Scholar
Cloke, (F.), Toll, (H. W.) and Barclay, (C. F.), 4925. Report on Tavlstock Canal Tunnel.Google Scholar
Barclay, (C. F.) and Toll, (R. W.), 1951. Report on Tavlstock Cereal Ttmnel.Google Scholar
Cloke, (F.), Toll, (R. W.) and Barclay, (C. F.), 1933. Report on Tavlstock Canal Tunnel.Google Scholar
Sorzellus, (J), 1825. Jebres-.Berlcht, 4, 149150.Google Scholar
Brammall, (A.) and Harwood, (H. F.), 1924. Mineral. Mag., 20, 201221.Google Scholar
Brooke, (H.J.A.), 1823. Quarterly Journ. of Science, Literature and the Arts, Royal Institute of Great Britain, 16, 274275.Google Scholar
Busz, (K.), 1905. Rept. Brit. Assoc. Adv. Sci. for 1904, 563565.Google Scholar
Church, (A. H.), 1875. Journ. Chem. Soc., 26, 105107.Google Scholar
Collins, (J. H.), 1871. A Handbook too the Mineralogy of Cornwall and Davon. Truro and London.Google Scholar
Dines, (H. G.), 1956. The Metalliferous mining region of South-West England. Vol 2. Mem. Geol. Survey of Gt. Britain, London.Google Scholar
du Ry, (p.), Fouassln, (M.), Jedwab, (J.) and Van Tassel, (R.), 1976. Ann. Soc. géol, 99, 4760.Google Scholar
Drugman, (J.), 1914. Mineral. Mag., 17, 193201.Google Scholar
Embrey, (P.G,) and Fejer, (E. E.), 1969. Mineral. Mag., 37, 123127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greg, (R. P.) and Lettsom, (W. G.), 1858. Manual of the Mineralogy of Great Britain and Ireland London.Google Scholar
Hall, (T,M.), 4668. The Mineralogist's Directory. London.Google Scholar
Hanson, (A. M.), 1960. Acta. Cryst., 13, 384387 .CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurlbut, (C,S.), 1950. Amer. Min., 35, 793805.Google Scholar
Elngsbury, (A.M.G.), 1957. Mineral. Mag., 31, 498.Google Scholar
Elngsbury, (A.M.G.), 1958, Mineral. Mag., 31, 815817.Google Scholar
Elngsbury, (A.M.G.), 1961. Mineral. Mag., 32, 921940.Google Scholar
Elngsbury, (A.M.G.), 1964. Present views on some aspects of the geology of Cornwall and Devon. 150th. Anniversary of Royal Geol. Soc. Cornwall, 247 - 266.Google Scholar
Klement, (R.), Hater, (F.) and Kohrer, (K.), 1942. Zeits. Elektrochem. angew. physik. chem., 48, 334336.Google Scholar
Lateen, (E. S.) and Vassar, (H. E.), 1925. Amer. Min. 10, 7983.Google Scholar
Leltht, (W. C.), 1971. Mineral. Record, 2, 214221.Google Scholar
Lévy, (A.), 4857. Description d'une Collection de Mineraux fermee par M. Henri Heuland et appartment a M. Ch. Hampden Turner de Rooksnest, dens le Comte de Surrey en Angleterre. London. 3, 409 - 410, and Plate 81, Fig. 2.Google Scholar
McLintock, (W.F.P.) 1924. Mineral Mag., 20, 140150.Google Scholar
Miers, (H. A.), 1897, Mineral. Mag., 11, 263285.Google Scholar
Otto, (H.), 1935. Tschermaks Min. und Patr. Mitteilungen, 47, 89140.Google Scholar
Penfleld, (S. L.), 1880. Amer. Journ. Sci., Series 3, 19, 315 .CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Proudfoot, (V. B.), 1998. Mineral. Mag., 31, 344345.Google Scholar
Rammelsberg, (C. F.), 1852. Ann.Phys.Chem. (Poggendorff), 85 435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rudler, (F. W.), 1905. A Handbook to a Collection of the Minerals of the .British Islands, mostly selected from the Ludlam Collectlon. in the Museum of Practical Geology, Jermyn Street, London, S.W. London.Google Scholar
Russell, (A.), 1926. Mineral. Mag., 21, 124128.Google Scholar
Russell, (A.), Personal notes, held in the British Museum (Natural History).Google Scholar
Taylor, (J.), 1817. Trans. Geol. Soc., Series 1, 4, 146155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toll, (R. W.), 1948. The Mining Magazlne, 79, 144148.Google Scholar
Williams, (S. A.) and khin, (B. S.), 1971. Mineral. Record, 2, 126127.Google Scholar
Worth, (R. H.), 1920, Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., 75, 77118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wyckoff, (R.W.G.), 1965. Crystal Structures, 2nd. Ed., 3, 569570.Google Scholar