Friedrichbeckeite

K(◻Na)Mg2(Be2Mg)Si12O30
IMA status
  • Approved
IMA symbol
Fri
IMA approved
2008
Also known as
  • Friedrichbeckeiet
  • IMA2008-019

Where it forms, where it's found

Geological setting

In vesicles in pyrometamorphically metasomatized silicate-rich xenoliths in leucite-tephrite volcanic rock.

Type locality
Caspar quarry
  1. Ettringen
  2. Vordereifel
  3. Mayen-Koblenz
  4. Rhineland-Palatinate
  5. Germany

50.3525°, 7.2335°

1recorded occurrences
Source · OpenStreetMap

Safety & handling

Physical

Hardness
123456789106/ 10 MOHS
  1. 1Talc
  2. 2Gypsum
  3. 3Calcite
  4. 4Fluorite
  5. 5Apatite
  6. 6Orthoclase
  7. 7Quartz
  8. 8Topaz
  9. 9Corundum
  10. 10Diamond
Transparency
Transparent · Translucent
Colour
Colorless to pale yellow
Streak
White to pale cream
Tenacity
brittle
Cleavage
None Observed
Fracture
Irregular/Uneven
Density
2.686 g/cm³

Optical

Optical type
Uniaxial (+)
Refractive index
1.552 – 1.561
Surface relief
Moderate
Principal indices
nω 1.552 · nε 1.561
Pleochroism
Visible

O = yellow; E = light blue.

Extinction
Anomalous extinction, slight biaxiality and zoning sometimes observed.
Michel-Lévy diagramhighlighted lineδ = 0.0090
Attainable Michel-Lévy rangeΔ ∈ [0, t·δmax]90 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°
Retardation90 nm
Order1st order
XPL colour

Crystallography

Crystal system
Hexagonal
Space group
#123
Cell parameters
a = 9.970 Å · c = 14.130 Å
Type-locality form

Thin tabular crystals flattened on (0001), with a maximum diameter of 0.6 mm and a maximum thickness of 0.1 mm.

Crystal structure

Synonyms

  • Friedrichbeckeiet
  • IMA2008-019

In other languages

German
Friedrichbeckeit · IMA 2008-019
Italian
friedrichbeckeite

Classification

Strunz
10th ed.

9.CM.05

  • 9SilicatesClass
  • 9.CCyclosilicatesDivision
  • 9.CM[Si6O18]12- 6-membered double rings (sechser-Doppelringe)Group
  • 9.CM.05FriedrichbeckeiteSpecies

Group, growth & confusion

Literature, links & citation

Citations
  1. 2009Jahn, S. (2009): Friedrichbeckeit - Ein neues Mineral vom Bellerberg. Mineralien-Welt, 20(5), 7. [Brief portrait in German]
  2. 2009Lengauer, C. L., Hrauda, N., Kolitsch, U., Krickl, R., Tillmanns, E. (2009) Friedrichbeckeite, K (□0.5Na0.5)2 (Mg0.8Mn0.1Fe0.1)2 (Be0.6 Mg0.4)3 [Si12O30], a new milarite-type mineral from the Bellerberg volcano, Eifel area, Germany. Mineralogy and Petrology, 96 (3) 221-232 doi:10.1007/s00710-009-0050-9 DOI: 10.1007/s00710-009-0050-9
  3. 2009Piilonen, P. C., Poirier, G., Tait, K. T. (2009) New Mineral Names. American Mineralogist, 94 (10) 1495-1501 doi:10.2138/am.2009.550DOI: 10.2138/am.2009.550
  4. 2011(2011) Friedrichbeckeite. Handbook of Mineralogy. Mineralogical Society of America
Cite this entry
@misc{mineral2026,
  author    = {Mineral Index editorial board},
  title     = {Friedrichbeckeite — Mineral Index},
  year      = {2026},
  url       = {https://mineralindex.org/minerals/friedrichbeckeite-38698},
  note      = {Accessed 2026-05-11}
}