Calciotantite

CaTa4O11
IMA status
  • Approved
IMA symbol
Ctan
Discovered
1982
Also known as
  • Calciotantiet
  • IMA1981-039

Where it forms, where it's found

Geological setting

In the albite-spodumene zone of granite pegmatites.

Type locality
Vasin-Myl'k Mt
  1. Voron'i Tundry
  2. Murmansk Oblast
  3. Russia

68.3833°, 35.8633°

6recorded occurrences
Source · OpenStreetMap

Physical

Hardness
123456789106.5/ 10 MOHS
  1. 1Talc
  2. 2Gypsum
  3. 3Calcite
  4. 4Fluorite
  5. 5Apatite
  6. 6Orthoclase
  7. 7Quartz
  8. 8Topaz
  9. 9Corundum
  10. 10Diamond
Transparency
Transparent
Colour
Colorless
Streak
White
Cleavage
None Observed
Density
7.46 g/cm³

Optical

Optical type
Uniaxial
Tropism
Anisotropic
Reflectance R%
(16.9, 16.3) 486, (17.0, 16.6) 551, (17.1, 16.7) 589, (18.2, 18.0) 656
UV response
None
Reflected-light panel
17.3 %anisotropic · dual curve
Specimen sRGB 156, 106, 56
White reference100 % reflector under same lamp
R₁ R₂
Mode

Crystallography

Crystal system
Hexagonal
Space group
#120
Cell parameters
a = 6.2261(6) Å · c = 12.280(1) Å
Z
2
Type-locality form

Calciotantite occurs as square to rectangular to hexagonal crystals 0.03-0.05 mm as inclusions in microlite or as veinlets 0.1-0.3 mm in microlite.

Crystal structure

Chemical composition

Constituent elements
Mass composition breakdown
ElementAtoms At. mass g/mol Mass g/molMass share
73TaTantalumTantalum4180.948723.792
77.01%
8OOxygenOxygen1115.999175.989
18.73%
20CaCalciumCalcium140.07840.078
4.26%
Total939.859100.00%

Mass share = atoms × atomic mass ÷ molar mass × 100

From IMA formula

Synonyms

  • Calciotantiet
  • IMA1981-039

In other languages

German
Calciotantit · IMA 1981-039
Italian
Calciotantite · Ungursaite

Classification

Strunz
10th ed.

4.DJ.05

  • 4OxidesClass
  • 4.DMetal: Oxygen = 1:2 and similarDivision
  • 4.DJWith large (+- medium-sized) cations; polyhedral frameworksGroup
  • 4.DJ.05CalciotantiteSpecies
Dana
8th ed.

08.06.02.01

  • 08Multiple Oxides Containing Niobium, Tantalum or TitaniumClass
  • 08.06(AB)6O11·nH2OType
  • 08.06.02Calciotantite GroupGroup
  • 08.06.02.01CalciotantiteSpecies
CIM

18.1.9

  • 18Niobates and TantalatesClass
  • 18.1Niobates and tantalates containing neither rare earths nor UGroup
  • 18.1.9CalciotantiteSpecies

Group, growth & confusion

In the same group
2 members

Literature, links & citation

Citations
  1. 1982Voloshin, A.V., Pakhomovskii, Y.A., Tysheva, F.M. (1982) Calciotantite, CaTa4O11 - a new mineral from granitic pegmatites of the Kola Peninsula. Mineralogiceskij Zhurnal: 4: 75-79.
  2. 1983Dunn, Pete J., Fleischer, Michael, Burns, Roger G., Pabst, Adolf (1983) New mineral names. American Mineralogist, 68 (3-4) 471-475
  3. 1998Yamnova, N.A., Pushcharovskii, D.Y., Voloshin, A.V. (1998) Identity of ungursaite with calciotantite and synthetic CaTa4O11. Soviet Physics - Crystallography: 33: 498-499.
  4. 1999Cooper, M. A., Hawthorne, F. C., Černý, P. (1999) Ta–Nb order in the crystal structure of niobium-rich calciotantite. The Canadian Mineralogist, 37 (5) 1289-1294
  5. 2021(2021) Calciotantite. Handbook of Mineralogy. Mineralogical Society of America
Cite this entry
@misc{mineral2026,
  author    = {Mineral Index editorial board},
  title     = {Calciotantite — Mineral Index},
  year      = {2026},
  url       = {https://mineralindex.org/minerals/calciotantite-834},
  note      = {Accessed 2026-05-11}
}