Chrysothallite

K6Cu6Tl3+Cl17(OH)4 · H2O
IMA status
  • Approved
IMA symbol
Cry
Also known as
  • Chrysothalliet
  • IMA2013-008

Where it forms, where it's found

Geological setting

Fumerole

Type locality
Pyatno fumarole (Spot)
  1. Second scoria cone
  2. Northern Breakthrough (North Breach)
  3. Great Fissure eruption (Main Fracture)
  4. Tolbachik Volcanic field
  5. Milkovsky District
  6. Kamchatka Krai
  7. Russia
1recorded occurrences
Source · OpenStreetMap

Safety & handling

Physical

Transparency
Transparent
Colour
Golden-yellow to light yellow
Streak
White
Tenacity
brittle
Cleavage
None Observed
Fracture
Irregular/Uneven
Density
2.95 g/cm³

Optical

Optical type
Uniaxial (+)
Refractive index
1.72 – 1.73
Surface relief
High
Principal indices
nω 1.72 · nε 1.73
Michel-Lévy diagramhighlighted lineδ = 0.0100
Attainable Michel-Lévy rangeΔ ∈ [0, t·δmax]100 nm1st order
Δ = 0Δmax
Thin-section mosaic70 grains · random 3D orientations
PPLpleochroism per grain
XPLindependent extinctions · rotate the stage
Interference simulatorsingle grain · PPL ↔ XPL
PPLpleochroism only · colour blends on rotation
XPLinterference colour · extinct every 90°
Retardation100 nm
Order1st order
XPL colour

Crystallography

Crystal system
Tetragonal
Space group
I4/mmm
Cell parameters
a = 11.3689(7) Å · c = 26.207(2) Å
Z
4
Type-locality form

tabular, lamellar, equant or short prismatic crystals up to 0.1 mm in size, their clusters and pseudomorphs after urusovite crystal crusts up to 1.5 cm × 2 cm in area.

Crystal structure

Chemical composition

Constituent elements
Mass composition breakdown
ElementAtoms At. mass g/mol Mass g/molMass share
17ClChlorineChlorine1735.450602.650
39.94%
29CuCopperCopper663.546381.276
25.27%
19KPotassiumPotassium639.098234.588
15.55%
81TlThalliumThallium1204.380204.380
13.54%
8OOxygenOxygen515.99979.995
5.30%
1HHydrogenHydrogen61.0086.048
0.40%
Total1508.937100.00%

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

From IMA formula

Impurities
  • Zn

Synonyms

  • Chrysothalliet
  • IMA2013-008

In other languages

German
Chrysothallit · IMA 2013-008
Italian
chrysothallite

Classification

Strunz
10th ed.

3.DA.70

  • 3HalidesClass
  • 3.DOxyhalides, hydroxyhalides and related double halidesDivision
  • 3.DAWith Cu, etc., without PbGroup
  • 3.DA.70ChrysothalliteSpecies

Group, growth & confusion

Often grow together
1 mineral

Literature, links & citation

Citations
  1. 2013Williams, P. A., Hatert, F., Pasero, M., Mills, S. J. (2013) New minerals and nomenclature modifications approved in 2013. CNMNC Newsletter No 16. Mineralogical Magazine, 77 (6) 2695-2709 doi:10.1180/minmag.2013.077.6.01DOI: 10.1180/minmag.2013.077.6.01
  2. 2015Pekov, Igor V., Zubkova, Natalia V., Belakovskiy, Dmitry I., Yapaskurt, Vasiliy O., Vigasina, Marina F., Lykova, Inna S., Sidorov, Evgeny G., Pushcharovsky, Dmitry Yu. (2015) Chrysothallite K6Cu6Tl3+Cl17(OH)4·H2O, a new mineral species from the Tolbachik volcano, Kamchatka, Russia. Mineralogical Magazine, 79 (2) 365-376 doi:10.1180/minmag.2015.079.2.14 DOI: 10.1180/minmag.2015.079.2.14
  3. 2016(2016) Chrysothallite. Handbook of Mineralogy. Mineralogical Society of America
Cite this entry
@misc{mineral2026,
  author    = {Mineral Index editorial board},
  title     = {Chrysothallite — Mineral Index},
  year      = {2026},
  url       = {https://mineralindex.org/minerals/chrysothallite-43874},
  note      = {Accessed 2026-05-11}
}