[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"minerals:one:4092":3},{"id":4,"longid":5,"guid":6,"name":7,"shortcode_ima":8,"entrytype":9,"entrytype_text":10,"varietyof":11,"synid":11,"polytypeof":11,"groupid":11,"weighting":12,"nolocadd":13,"blacklisted":13,"mindat_formula":14,"mindat_formula_note":11,"ima_formula":15,"elements":16,"sigelements":23,"key_elements":24,"impurities":25,"cim":26,"ima_status":27,"ima_notes":11,"ima_history":11,"approval_year":29,"publication_year":30,"discovery_year":31,"strunz10ed1":32,"strunz10ed2":22,"strunz10ed3":33,"strunz10ed4":34,"dana8ed1":35,"dana8ed2":36,"dana8ed3":37,"dana8ed4":38,"csystem":39,"cclass":11,"spacegroup":11,"spacegroupset":40,"a":40,"b":40,"c":40,"alpha":40,"beta":40,"gamma":40,"aerror":11,"berror":11,"cerror":11,"alphaerror":11,"betaerror":11,"gammaerror":11,"va3":11,"z":11,"csmetamict":13,"commentcrystal":41,"twinning":11,"tranglide":11,"parting":11,"epitaxidescription":11,"morphology":11,"tlform":42,"hmin":43,"hmax":43,"hardtype":11,"vhnmin":44,"vhnmax":40,"vhnerror":11,"vhng":11,"vhns":11,"commenthard":11,"dmeas":40,"dmeas2":40,"dcalc":40,"dmeaserror":11,"dcalcerror":11,"commentdense":11,"lustre":45,"lustretype":45,"commentluster":11,"diapheny":46,"streak":11,"colour":47,"commentcolor":11,"colors":48,"streak_colors":11,"luminescence":11,"uv":11,"cleavage":11,"cleavagetype":11,"fracturetype":51,"tenacity":11,"commentbreak":11,"opticaltype":52,"opticalsign":11,"opticalalpha":40,"opticalalpha2":40,"opticalalphaerror":11,"opticalbeta":40,"opticalbeta2":40,"opticalbetaerror":11,"opticalgamma":40,"opticalgamma2":40,"opticalgammaerror":11,"opticalomega":40,"opticalomega2":40,"opticalomegaerror":11,"opticalepsilon":40,"opticalepsilon2":40,"opticalepsilonerror":11,"opticaln":53,"opticaln2":40,"opticalnerror":11,"optical2vcalc":40,"optical2vcalc2":40,"optical2vcalcerror":11,"optical2vmeasured":40,"optical2vmeasured2":40,"optical2vmeasurederror":11,"rimin":11,"rimax":11,"opticaldispersion":11,"opticalpleochroism":11,"opticalpleochorismdesc":11,"opticalbirefringence":11,"opticalcomments":11,"opticalcolour":11,"opticalinternal":11,"opticaltropic":11,"opticalanisotropism":11,"opticalbireflectance":11,"opticalextinction":11,"opticalr":11,"specdispm":11,"ir":11,"electrical":11,"magnetism":11,"thermalbehaviour":11,"other":11,"industrial":11,"occurrence":54,"otheroccurrence":11,"type_specimen_store":55,"description_short":56,"aboutname":57,"rock_parent":11,"rock_parent2":11,"rock_root":9,"rock_bgs_code":11,"meteoritical_code":11,"updttime":58,"reviewed_at":11,"variety_of":11,"varieties":59,"group_members":60,"associates":61,"confused_with":62,"type_localities":63,"occurrence_total":43,"citations":70,"images":82,"structures":125,"synonyms":126,"language_names":129,"wikidata_qid":146,"texts":147},4092,"1:1:4092:7","343cda06-292e-46e3-bd3e-a3a118b48d12","Umbozerite","Ubz",0,"mineral",null,316,false,"Na\u003Csub>3\u003C\u002Fsub>Sr\u003Csub>4\u003C\u002Fsub>Th[Si(O,OH)\u003Csub>3-4\u003C\u002Fsub>]\u003Csub>8\u003C\u002Fsub>","Na\u003Csub>3\u003C\u002Fsub>Sr\u003Csub>4\u003C\u002Fsub>ThSi\u003Csub>8\u003C\u002Fsub>(O,OH)\u003Csub>24\u003C\u002Fsub>",[17,18,19,20,21,22],"Na","Si","Sr","Th","O","H",[17,18,19,20,21],[19,20],"Ti,Ce,Fe,U,Mn,Ca,Ba,K","14.11.3",[28],"APPROVED",1973,1974,"1973","9","G","15","78","7","17","1","Amorphous","0","Heating yielded thorianite lines, with additional lines. ","Irregular masses and poorly formed tetragonal crystals up to 3 x 1 mm.",5,"506","Vitreous","Translucent","bottle-green; rapidly changes to green-brown or brown",[49,50],"green","brown","Conchoidal","Isotropic","1.640","Ussingite veinlets, cutting alkalic rocks of the upper part of the differentiated complex.","Mining Institute, St. Petersburg, Russia, 992\u002F1.\r\nInstitute of Mineralogy and Geochemistry of Rare Elements, Moscow, Russia.\r\nA.E. Fersman Mineralogical Museum, Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia, 75150.\r\nNational School of Mines, Paris, France.","Compare UM1990-96-SiO:NaTh, UM2007-47-SiO:HKNaTh, UM2007-48-SiO:HNaSrThTi, and UM2007-49-SiO:HNaSrThTi.","For the type locality, near Umbozero lake — the second-largest lake of the Kola peninsula.","2025-08-11 12:14:24",[],[],[],[],[64],{"id":65,"txt":66,"latitude":67,"longitude":68,"country":69},2689,"Karnasurt Mountain, Lovozersky District, Murmansk Oblast, Russia",67.8808065,34.6817436,"Russia",[71,74,78],{"id":72,"year":30,"html":73,"doi":11},16052996,"Es'kova, E.M., Semenov, E.I., Khomyakov, A.P., Mer'kov, A.N., Lebedeva, S.I., Dubakina, L.S. (1974) Umbozerite - a new mineral. Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, 216, 169-171.",{"id":75,"year":76,"html":77,"doi":11},526451,1975,"Fleischer, Michael (1975) New mineral names. \u003Ci>American Mineralogist\u003C\u002Fi>,  60 (3-4) 340-341 \u003Ca target='_blank' href='http:\u002F\u002Fwww.minsocam.org\u002Fammin\u002FAM60\u002FAM60_340.pdf' class='refpdflink'>\u003C\u002Fa>",{"id":79,"year":80,"html":81,"doi":11},16967883,2001,"(2001) Umbozerite. \u003Ci>Handbook of Mineralogy\u003C\u002Fi>. Mineralogical Society of America \u003Ca target='_blank' href='https:\u002F\u002Fwww.handbookofmineralogy.org\u002Fpdfs\u002Fumbozerite.pdf' class='refpdflink'>\u003C\u002Fa>",[83,93,101,108,118],{"id":84,"source_url":85,"license_code":86,"credit_html":87,"title":88,"description":89,"author":90,"original_width":91,"original_height":92},24979,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=44067380","CC BY-SA 4.0","Weirdmeister, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=44067380\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Umbozerite.jpg","Umbozerite, Karnasurt Mt., Lovozero Massif, Kola, Russia, Size 4.2cm","Weirdmeister",2537,1743,{"id":94,"source_url":95,"license_code":86,"credit_html":96,"title":97,"description":98,"author":90,"original_width":99,"original_height":100},24980,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=46838112","Weirdmeister, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=46838112\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Umbozerite0.jpg","Umbozerite (red arrow) from Karnasurt Mt., Lovozero Massif, Kola, Russia, specimen width: 4.2cm",4720,3145,{"id":102,"source_url":103,"license_code":86,"credit_html":104,"title":105,"description":98,"author":90,"original_width":106,"original_height":107},24981,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=46838113","Weirdmeister, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=46838113\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Umbozerite1.jpg",5472,3648,{"id":109,"source_url":110,"license_code":111,"credit_html":112,"title":113,"description":114,"author":115,"original_width":116,"original_height":117},3012,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=30636611","Public domain","Modris Baum, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=30636611\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Belovite-(Ce), Umbozerite, Sérandite, Shkatulkalite-576104.jpg","\u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FBelovite-(Ce)\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Belovite-(Ce)\">Belovite-(Ce)\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FUmbozerite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Umbozerite\">Umbozerite\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FS%C3%A9randite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Sérandite\">Sérandite\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FShkatulkaite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Shkatulkaite\">Shkatulkaite\u003C\u002Fa> (FOV 7.1 x 4.7 mm)\n\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>Locality: Shkatulka pegmatite, Umbozero mine (Umbozerskii mine), Alluaiv Mt, Lovozero Massif, Kola Peninsula, Murmanskaja Oblast', Northern Region, Russia\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>Description: Orange sérandite (on the left), pink ussingite (top), greenish belovite-(Ce) (center). I see deep REE absorption lines. It’s a bit hard to tell exactly where they are coming from, but I’m fairly sure it is from the greenish xl. Per Pavel's inspection of the photo, he agrees that it is belovite. The xl is about 1¾ mm long.\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>The black stuff (on the right) has a conchoidal fracture and looks a bit like steenstruoine-(Ce, but is is altered umbozerite (as confirmed by Pavel from inspection of the photo.)\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>The white stuff on the umbozerite is probably shkatulkalite. (Pavel did not comment on this.)\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>","Modris Baum",1024,682,{"id":119,"source_url":120,"license_code":111,"credit_html":121,"title":122,"description":123,"author":115,"original_width":116,"original_height":124},3013,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=31915131","Modris Baum, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=31915131\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Belovite-(Ce), Umbozerite, Serandite, Shkatulkalite-576102.jpg","\u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FBelovite-(Ce)\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Belovite-(Ce)\">Belovite-(Ce)\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FUmbozerite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Umbozerite\">Umbozerite\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FS%C3%A9randite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Sérandite\">Sérandite\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FShkatulkalite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Shkatulkalite\">Shkatulkalite\u003C\u002Fa> (FOV 7.1 x 4.7 mm)\n\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>Locality: Shkatulka pegmatite, Umbozero mine (Umbozerskii mine; Umba Mine), Alluaiv Mt, Lovozero Massif, Murmanskaya Oblast', Northern Region, Russia\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>Description: Thanks to Pavel Kartashov. MOB coll. This is part of \u003Ca rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external autonumber\" href=\"http:\u002F\u002Fwww.mindat.org\u002Fphoto-576102.html\">[1]\u003C\u002Fa> - which see for a complete list of minerals on the specimen and links to other close-ups. Orange sérandite (on the left), pink ussingite (top), greenish belovite-(Ce) (center). I see deep REE absorption lines. It’s a bit hard to tell exactly where they are coming from, but I’m fairly sure it is from the greenish xl. Per Pavel's inspection of the photo, he agrees that it is belovite. The xl is about 1¾ mm long. There is another, larger belovite xl on the specimen that Pavel pointed out (see the link above), but I failed to spot it because under tungsten lighting it looks too similar to sérandite. However, under CFL it turns quite green and can be easily spotted in the hand held specimen. (Note: Belovite-(Ce) apparently has fairly good cleavage for an apatite group mineral, which is another reason that I failed to spot via the scope.) The black stuff (on the right) has a conchoidal fracture and looks a bit like steenstruoine-(Ce, but is is altered umbozerite (as confirmed by Pavel from inspection of the photo.) The white stuff on the umbozerite is probably shkatulkalite. (Pavel did not comment on this.) Modified by CombineZP\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>",720,[],[127,128],"IMA1973-039","Umbozeriet",[130,134,139,143],{"lang":131,"names":132},"ca",[133],"umbozerita",{"lang":135,"names":136},"de",[137,138],"IMA 1973-039","Umbozerit",{"lang":140,"names":141},"eu",[142],"Umbozerita",{"lang":144,"names":145},"it",[7],"Q4003514",{"history":11,"applications":11}]