Where it forms, where it's found
- Geological setting
Carlsonite was produced by the condensation of gases in the oil-shale fire. The shale fire occurred in a rock outcrop of the Late Devonian Huron Shale Member of the Ohio Shale along River Road, northeast of the town of Monroeville in Ridgefield Township, Huron County. At the time of inspection, geologists were uncertain of the cause. The current hypothesis suggests the fire started in September 2009 as the result of spontaneous combustion. The shale fire burned until March 2011 and created a variety of exotic mineral species, such as boussinggaulite and lonecreekite, as well as the never-before-observed carlsonite.
- Type locality
- Huron Shale burn site
- Huron River
- Huron County
- Ohio
- USA
41.2781°, -82.6742°
Physical
Optical
- Optical type
- Biaxial (-) · 2V measured = 80° · 2V calc = 78°
- Refractive index
- 1.576 – 1.591
- Surface relief
- Moderate
- Principal indices
- nα 1.576 · nβ 1.585 · nγ 1.591
- Pleochroism
yellow (X), orange (Y & Z); X < Y ~ Z
- Dispersion
- strong (r > v)
- UV response
- not observed
Crystallography
- Cell parameters
- a = 9.5927(2) Å · b = 9.7679(3) Å · c = 18.3995(13) Å
- Cell angles
- α = 93.250(7) ° · β = 95.258(7) ° · γ = 117.993(8) °
- Ratio a:b:c
- 1 : 1.018 : 1.918
- Unit cell volume
- 1506.15 ų
- Z
- 2
- Morphology
Forms observed: (100), (001), (10), (111), (1), (01)
- Twinning
cross-hatched, rare
- Type-locality form
It occurs in crystal form as thin to thick tablets up to about 0.5 mm but often much smaller; the tablets are flattened on {001); at this scale, the yellow to orange-brown crystals are best viewed through a high-powered microscope; also as stout prisms el
Chemical composition
Synonyms
- Carlsoniet
- IMA2014-067
In other languages
- German
- Carlsonit · IMA 2014-067
- Italian
- carlsonite
Classification
7.DF
- 7SulfatesClass
- 7.DSulfates (selenates, etc.) with additional anions, with H2ODivision
- 7.DFWith large and medium-sized cationsGroup
- 7.DFCarlsoniteSpecies
Literature, links & citation
- 2010Larsen, G. (2010) Survey inspects a rare Ohio geohazard. Ohio Geology: 1: 7.
- 2010Carlson, E. (2010) Analysis of Huron River shale fire minerals reveals two specimens new to Ohio. Ohio Geology: 2: 7.
- 2014Kampf, A. R., Richards, R. P., Nash, B. P. (2014) The 2H and 3R polytypes of sabieite, NH4Fe3+(SO4)2, from a natural fire in an oil-bearing shale near Milan, Ohio. American Mineralogist, 99 (7) 1500-1506 doi:10.2138/am.2014.4884DOI: 10.2138/am.2014.4884
- 2015Blake, D. (2015) Carlsonite: New mineral species discovered in northern Ohio. Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Ohio Geology Extra, http://geosurvey.ohiodnr.gov/extra-news-archives/2015-articles/carlsonite.
- 2015Williams, P. A., Hatert, F., Pasero, M., Mills, S. J. (2015) New minerals and nomenclature modifications approved in 2014 and 2015. Newsletter No 23. Mineralogical Magazine, 79 (1) 51-58 doi:10.1180/minmag.2015.079.1.05DOI: 10.1180/minmag.2015.079.1.05
@misc{mineral2026,
author = {Mineral Index editorial board},
title = {Carlsonite — Mineral Index},
year = {2026},
url = {https://mineralindex.org/minerals/carlsonite-46504},
note = {Accessed 2026-05-11}
}