Where it forms, where it's found
- Geological setting
Leadhillite is a secondary mineral found in the oxidized zones of lead mineral deposits.
- Type locality
- Susanna Mine (Glennery Scar vein
- Susanna vein [Scar vein]
- Portobello vein
- Humby vein
- Lead vein)
- Leadhills
- South Lanarkshire
- Scotland
- UK
55.4233°, -3.7675°
Safety & handling
Physical
- Hardness
- 1Talc
- 2Gypsum
- 3Calcite
- 4Fluorite
- 5Apatite
- 6Orthoclase
- 7Quartz
- 8Topaz
- 9Corundum
- 10Diamond
- Lustre
- Resinous to adamantine
- Transparency
- Transparent · Translucent
- Colour
- Colourless to white · grey · yellowish · pale green to blue · colourless in transmitted light.
- Streak
- White
- Tenacity
- brittle
- Cleavage
- Perfect
Perfect on (001) and easy.
- Fracture
- Irregular/Uneven
- Density
- 6.55 g/cm³
Optical
- Optical type
- Biaxial (-) · 2V measured = 10° · 2V calc = 10°
- Refractive index
- 1.87 – 2.01
- Surface relief
- Very high
- Principal indices
- nα 1.87 · nβ 2.0085 · nγ 2.01
- Dispersion
- relatively strong
- UV response
- Pale yellowish under (SW UV).
Crystallography
- Space group
- P21/a
- Cell parameters
- a = 9.11 Å · b = 20.82 Å · c = 11.59 Å
- Cell angles
- β = 90.46 °
- Ratio a:b:c
- 1 : 2.285 : 1.272
- Unit cell volume
- 2198.21 ų
- Z
- 8
- Morphology
Usually as thin to thick tabular pseudohexagonal crystals, (001) with hexagonal outline; several rhombohedral and pyramidal forms common; also prismatic parallel to [001], or equant or granular. When [101] is developed the faces may show striations, or be curved.
- Twinning
Commonly twinned on (140); as lamellar twins with the composition plane parallel to (42) or (340); as aragonite-type contact twins; as penetration twins; with other twin laws producing pseudohexagonal groupings.
- Parting
- Translation gliding on (001), as well as twin gliding with K1(340), σ2[140]; K2(34¯0), σ1[140].
- Comment
Pseudohexagonal.
Chemical composition
Synonyms
- Bleisulphotricarbonat
- Lead sulphato-tricarbonate
- Leadillita
- Maxit
- Maxita
- Maxite
- Plomb carbonaté rhomboidal
- Plomb sulfato-tricarbonaté
- Psimythit
- Schwefelkohlensaures Blei
- Ternärbleierz
In other languages
- French
- Leadhillite
- German
- Leadhillit
- Spanish
- leadhillita
- Italian
- leadhillite
- Arabic
- ليدهيليت
Classification
5.BF.40
- 5CarbonatesClass
- 5.BCarbonates with additional anions, without H2ODivision
- 5.BFWith (Cl), SO4, PO4, TeO3Group
- 5.BF.40LeadhilliteSpecies
17.01.02.01
- 17Compound CarbonatesClass
- 17.01MiscellaneousType
- 17.01.02— unnamed intermediate level —Group
- 17.01.02.01LeadhilliteSpecies
12.2.11
- 12Carbonates with other anionsClass
- 12.2Carbonates with sulphateGroup
- 12.2.11LeadhilliteSpecies
Group, growth & confusion
AlamositePbSiO3Mineral—
AnglesitePb(SO4)Mineral—
CaledoniteCu2Pb5(SO4)3(CO3)(OH)6Mineral—
CerussitePb(CO3)Mineral—
HydrocerussitePb3(CO3)2(OH)2Mineral—
LanarkitePb2O(SO4)Mineral—
LinariteCuPb(SO4)(OH)2Mineral—
MattheddleitePb5(SiO4)1.5(SO4)1.5ClMineral—
MimetitePb5(AsO4)3ClMineral—
PhoenicochroitePb2O(CrO4)Mineral—
Literature, links & citation
- —Maxit. - Journal für Praktische Chemie 5(1):470-476; Weinheim. (as Maxite)
- 1817Bournon, Comte de (1817) Catalogue de la collection minéralogique particulière du roi, with atlas in fol., Paris: 343. (as Plomb carbonaté rhomboidal)
- 1820Brooke (1820) Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, Edinburgh: 3: 117 (as Sulphato-tricarbonate of Lead).
- 1832Beudant, François-Sulpice (1832) Traité élémentaire de minéralogie. Deuxiéme Edition [Elementary Treatise on Mineralogy. Second Edition] (2nd ed.) Vol. 2 - Tome II [Volume II]. Chez Verdière.
- 1847Dufrénoy, A. (1847) Traité de minéralogie, 1st. Edition, Vol. 3: 152 (as Plomb sulfato-tricarbonaté).
@misc{mineral2026,
author = {Mineral Index editorial board},
title = {Leadhillite — Mineral Index},
year = {2026},
url = {https://mineralindex.org/minerals/leadhillite-2361},
note = {Accessed 2026-05-11}
}
