God for us to design products, we are the porters of nature!

Home | Mineral Specimens | Gem materials | Mineral Datum | Rock | News | Photos | Contact Us
Welcome, please login, or click here to register!
Dominant species
+More..
Tephroite
Tephroite
Chemical
Formula
Mn2SiO4
Species
Silicates
Crystal
System
Orthorhombic
Mohs
Scale
6
Specific
Gravity
3.87-4.12
Color
Olive-green, bluish green, gray, °esh-red, reddish brown; pale green in thin section, may be colorless
Streak
Pale gray
Luster
Vitreous, Greasy
Refractive
Index
n = 1.759 n = 1.797 n = 1.860
Diaphaneity
Translucent
Cleavage
Distinct/GoodDistinct on Imperfect on
Fracture
Irregular/Uneven, Conchoidal
Crystal Habit:Crystals typically short, prismatic, to 4 cm, or anhedral, equidimensional. Commonly in disseminated grains, compact, or massive.
Geological Setting:In Fe-Mn ore deposits, skarns, and metamorphosed manganese rich sediments.
Tephroite is a non-metallic manganese silicate mineral with the formula, Mn2SiO4.

It was first described for an occurrence at the Sterling Hill Mine and Franklin, New Jersey, USA. It occurs in iron-manganese ore deposits and their related skarns. It also occurs in metamorphosed manganese-rich sediments. It occurs in association with: zincite, willemite, franklinite, rhodonite, jacobsite, diopside, gageite, bustamite, manganocalcite, glaucochroite, calcite, banalsite and alleghanyite. It can also be found in England and Sweden.

Tephroite has a hardness of 6 and a specific gravity of approximately 4.1, which is heavy for non-metallic minerals. Its name comes from the Greek tephros, "ash gray", for its color. It can also be found olive-green, greenish-blue, pink, or brown.