Where it forms, where it's found
- Geological setting
The mineralization is linked to Mid-Triassic calc-alkaline magmatism. Hydrothermal fluids related to volcanism deposited sulphides, baryte and Fe- and Mn-bearing minerals at the boundary between Ladinic volcanites and limestone of the Mount Spitz Formation. Supergene minerals including sulphates, carbonates and arsenates of Zn, Pb and Cu are very common.
- Type locality
- Trentini Mine
- Contrada Trentini
- Monte Naro - Riolo Valley side
- Monte Naro
- Torrebelvicino
- Vicenza Province
- Veneto
- Italy
45.7108°, 11.3050°
Safety & handling
Physical
Optical
- Surface relief
- Very high
- Principal indices
- n 2.13
- Birefringence
- Very high.
- Extinction
- Straight. Crystals are length-slow.
- Notes
Fassinaite has intense internal reflections, which do not allow satisfactory optical data to be collected; the crystals are length-slow and have very high birefringence.
Crystallography
- Space group
- #71
- Cell parameters
- a = 16.343(1) Å · b = 8.760(2) Å · c = 4.592(3) Å
- Ratio a:b:c
- 1 : 0.536 : 0.281
- Unit cell volume
- 657.4 ų
- Z
- 2
- Morphology
The crystals are acicular to prismatic [010], with a flattened diamond-shaped cross-section. The Austrian crystals are sufficiently well developed to allow determination of some of the crystal forms: the prism (101) is large and dominant, with a flat chisel-shaped {<em>hk</em>0} termination, possibly (110). Small faces which are possibly (011) are rarely present. Further forms are minute and difficult to measure as they are commonly rounded.
- Twinning
None observed.
- Type-locality form
Radiating aggregates of acicular, colourless crystals up to 0.2 mm long.
Chemical composition
Synonyms
- Fassinaiet
- IMA2011-048
- Unnamed (Pb Thiosulphate Carbonate)
In other languages
- German
- Fassinait · IMA 2011-048
- Italian
- fassinaite
Classification
7.JA.15
- 7SulfatesClass
- 7.JThiosulfatesDivision
- 7.JAThiosulfates of PbGroup
- 7.JA.15FassinaiteSpecies
Literature, links & citation
- 2010Kolitsch, U. (2010) Pb2(S2O3)(CO3): The first naturally occurring thiosulphate carbonate and its atomic arrangement. 20th General Meeting of the IMA (IMA2010), abstract in CD of Abstracts. Budapest, Hungary. 489pp.
- 2011Nestola, F., Bindi, L., Guastoni, A., Zorzi, F., Nasdala, L. (2011) Pb2(CO3)(S2O3), the first mineral with coexisting carbonate and thiosulfate groups from Trentini mine, Vicenza, Italy. Geoitalia 2011,, abstract in Plinius 37. Turin, Italy,. 308pp.
- 2011Williams, P. A., Hatert, F., Pasero, M., Mills, S. J. (2011) New minerals and nomenclature modifications approved in 2011, CNMNC Newsletter No. 10. Mineralogical Magazine, 75 (5) 2549-2561 doi:10.1180/minmag.2011.075.5.2549 DOI: 10.1180/minmag.2011.075.5.2549
- 2011Bindi, L., Nestola, F., Kolitsch, U., Guastoni, A., Zorzi, F. (2011) Fassinaite, Pb22+(S2O3)(CO3), the first mineral with coexisting thiosulphate and carbonate groups: description and crystal structure. Mineralogical Magazine, 75 (6) 2721-2732 doi:10.1180/minmag.2011.075.6.2721DOI: 10.1180/minmag.2011.075.6.2721
- 2012Kolitsch, U., Bindi, L., Nestola, F., Guastoni, A., Zorzi, F., Poeverlein, R. (2012) Fassinait, ein neues Bleimineral aus Italien, Österreich und Deutschland. Lapis, 37 (1) 52-53
@misc{mineral2026,
author = {Mineral Index editorial board},
title = {Fassinaite — Mineral Index},
year = {2026},
url = {https://mineralindex.org/minerals/fassinaite-40169},
note = {Accessed 2026-05-11}
}