[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"minerals:one:4383":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":22,"key_elements":11,"impurities":23,"cim":24,"ima_status":25,"ima_notes":11,"ima_history":11,"approval_year":27,"publication_year":28,"discovery_year":29,"strunz10ed1":30,"strunz10ed2":31,"strunz10ed3":31,"strunz10ed4":32,"dana8ed1":33,"dana8ed2":34,"dana8ed3":35,"dana8ed4":34,"csystem":36,"cclass":37,"spacegroup":11,"spacegroupset":38,"a":39,"b":38,"c":40,"alpha":38,"beta":38,"gamma":38,"aerror":11,"berror":11,"cerror":11,"alphaerror":11,"betaerror":11,"gammaerror":11,"va3":11,"z":41,"csmetamict":13,"commentcrystal":42,"twinning":11,"tranglide":11,"parting":11,"epitaxidescription":11,"morphology":11,"tlform":11,"hmin":43,"hmax":43,"hardtype":11,"vhnmin":38,"vhnmax":38,"vhnerror":11,"vhng":11,"vhns":11,"commenthard":11,"dmeas":44,"dmeas2":45,"dcalc":46,"dmeaserror":11,"dcalcerror":11,"commentdense":11,"lustre":47,"lustretype":48,"commentluster":11,"diapheny":49,"streak":11,"colour":50,"commentcolor":11,"colors":51,"streak_colors":11,"luminescence":11,"uv":11,"cleavage":55,"cleavagetype":56,"fracturetype":57,"tenacity":11,"commentbreak":11,"opticaltype":58,"opticalsign":59,"opticalalpha":38,"opticalalpha2":38,"opticalalphaerror":11,"opticalbeta":38,"opticalbeta2":38,"opticalbetaerror":11,"opticalgamma":38,"opticalgamma2":38,"opticalgammaerror":11,"opticalomega":60,"opticalomega2":38,"opticalomegaerror":43,"opticalepsilon":61,"opticalepsilon2":38,"opticalepsilonerror":43,"opticaln":38,"opticaln2":38,"opticalnerror":11,"optical2vcalc":38,"optical2vcalc2":38,"optical2vcalcerror":11,"optical2vmeasured":38,"optical2vmeasured2":38,"optical2vmeasurederror":11,"rimin":62,"rimax":63,"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":64,"magnetism":11,"thermalbehaviour":11,"other":65,"industrial":11,"occurrence":11,"otheroccurrence":11,"type_specimen_store":66,"description_short":67,"aboutname":68,"rock_parent":11,"rock_parent2":11,"rock_root":9,"rock_bgs_code":11,"meteoritical_code":11,"updttime":69,"reviewed_at":11,"variety_of":11,"varieties":70,"group_members":71,"associates":72,"confused_with":73,"type_localities":74,"occurrence_total":41,"citations":86,"images":112,"structures":158,"synonyms":159,"language_names":162,"wikidata_qid":198,"texts":199},4383,"1:1:4383:6","8b9fef68-5136-47fb-86e7-b272b47c5f48","Zakharovite","Zak",0,"mineral",null,656,false,"Na\u003Csub>4\u003C\u002Fsub>Mn\u003Csub>5\u003C\u002Fsub>Si\u003Csub>10\u003C\u002Fsub>O\u003Csub>24\u003C\u002Fsub>(OH)\u003Csub>6\u003C\u002Fsub>&middot;6H\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>O","Na\u003Csub>4\u003C\u002Fsub>Mn\u003Csup>2+\u003C\u002Fsup>\u003Csub>5\u003C\u002Fsub>Si\u003Csub>10\u003C\u002Fsub>O\u003Csub>24\u003C\u002Fsub>(OH)\u003Csub>6\u003C\u002Fsub> &middot; 6H\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>O",[17,18,19,20,21],"Mn","Na","Si","O","H",[17,18,19,20,21],"Fe,Mg,Ca,Sr,K","14.18.3",[26],"APPROVED",1981,1982,"1981","9","E","65","78","1","17","Trigonal",11,"0","14.58","37.71",9,"Space Group: P31m or P3m1:",2,"2.58","2.64","2.67","Pearly, waxy","Vitreous,Waxy,Pearly,Dull","Translucent,Opaque","Yellowish to bright yellow, orange, greenish yellow",[52,53,54],"yellow","orange","green","{0001}","Perfect","Conchoidal","Uniaxial","-","1.565","1.535",1.535,1.565,"Strongly electromagnetic","Readily decomposed by cold 10% HCl","Geology Museum, Kola Branch, Academy of Sciences, Apatity, Russia, 5713\u002F6.\r\nMining Institute, St. Petersburg, Russia, 1199.\r\nA.E. Fersman Mineralogical Museum, Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia, 81688.\r\nThe Natural History Museum, London, England, 1994,38.","See also Unnamed (Fe analogue of Zakharovite).\r\n\r\nVisually resembles shafranovskite, UM1990-85-SiO:AlCaFeHMnNa, UM1990-89-SiO:CaFFeHKNa, UM1990-93-SiO:FeHNa, and UM1990-94-SiO:FFeHNaTi.","Named in honor of Evgeny Evgenievich Zakharov (Евгений Евгеньевич Захаров) (1902, Moscow, Russia - 1980, Moscow, Russia), Director of the Moscow Geological Exploration Institute, Russia.","2025-08-11 12:14:25",[],[],[],[],[75,81],{"id":76,"txt":77,"latitude":78,"longitude":79,"country":80},2663,"Yukspor Mountain, Murmansk Oblast, Russia",67.673083,33.8122272,"Russia",{"id":82,"txt":83,"latitude":84,"longitude":85,"country":80},2689,"Karnasurt Mountain, Lovozersky District, Murmansk Oblast, Russia",67.8808065,34.6817436,[87,90,93,97,100,104,108],{"id":88,"year":28,"html":89,"doi":11},15939175,"Khomyakov, A.P., Kazakova, M.E., Vrublevskaya, Z.V., Zvyagin, B.B., Piloyan, G.O. (1982) Zakharovite Na4Mn52+Si10O24(OH)6.6H2O as a new hydrosilicate of sodium and manganese. Zapiski Vserossiyskogo Mineralogicheskogo Obshchestva: 111(4): 491-495.",{"id":91,"year":28,"html":92,"doi":11},16128743,"Khomyakov, A.P., Kazakova, M.E., Vrublevskaya, Z.V., Zvyagin, B.B., Piloyan, G.O. (1982) Zakharovite Na4Mn52+Si10O24(OH)6.6H2O as a new hydrosilicate of sodium and manganese. Zapiski Vserossiyskogo Mineralogicheskogo Obshchestva:  111(4): 491-495. (in Russian)",{"id":94,"year":95,"html":96,"doi":11},527828,1983,"Dunn, P.J.; Grice, J.D.; Fleischer, M.; Pabst, A. (1983) New mineral names. \u003Ci>American Mineralogist\u003C\u002Fi>,  68 (9-10). 1038-1041 \u003Ca target='_blank' href='http:\u002F\u002Fwww.minsocam.org\u002Fammin\u002FAM68\u002FAM68_1038.pdf?reftype=.pdf' class='refpdflink'>\u003C\u002Fa>",{"id":98,"year":95,"html":99,"doi":11},16128744,"English translation: International Geology Review: 25: (1983): 978-982.",{"id":101,"year":102,"html":103,"doi":11},12909035,1998,"Horváth, László, Gault, Robert A., Tarassoff, Peter, Pfenninger-Horváth, Elsa (1998) Mineralogy of the Saint-Amable Sill, Varennes and Saint-Amable, Quebec. \u003Ci>The Mineralogical Record\u003C\u002Fi>, 29 (2) 83-118",{"id":105,"year":106,"html":107,"doi":11},15937936,2000,"HORVÁTH, L., PFENNINGER HORVÁTH, E. (2000) I minerali di Mont-Saint-Hilaire (Québec, Canada) Rivista Mineralogica Italiana, 24, 140-202 (in Italian with English summary).",{"id":109,"year":110,"html":111,"doi":11},16968246,2001,"(2001) Zakharovite. \u003Ci>Handbook of Mineralogy\u003C\u002Fi>. Mineralogical Society of America \u003Ca target='_blank' href='https:\u002F\u002Fwww.handbookofmineralogy.org\u002Fpdfs\u002Fzakharovite.pdf' class='refpdflink'>\u003C\u002Fa>",[113,123,133,143,150],{"id":114,"source_url":115,"license_code":116,"credit_html":117,"title":118,"description":119,"author":120,"original_width":121,"original_height":122},28633,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=145640342","CC BY 4.0","David Hospital, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=145640342\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Zakharovite.jpg","Brown microcrystals of the rare mineral zakharovite from the famous Lovozero area (Lovozero Massif, Murmansk Oblast, Russian Federation) in a pink contrasting matrix. Ex Vandenbroucke Museum collection from Waregem, Belgium.","David Hospital",755,520,{"id":124,"source_url":125,"license_code":126,"credit_html":127,"title":128,"description":129,"author":130,"original_width":131,"original_height":132},25845,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=14866152","CC BY-SA 3.0","Leon Hupperichs, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=14866152\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Unnamed-(Fe-analogue-of-Zakharovite)-91816.jpg","Unnamed (Fe analogue of Zakharovite)\n\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>Locality: Aris Quarries (Ariskop Quarry; Railway Quarry), \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FAris\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Aris\">Aris\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FWindhoek\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Windhoek\">Windhoek\u003C\u002Fa>, Windhoek District, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FKhomas_Region\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Khomas Region\">Khomas Region\u003C\u002Fa>, Namibia (\u003Ca rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external text\" href=\"http:\u002F\u002Fwww.mindat.org\u002Floc-7687.html\">Locality at mindat.org\u003C\u002Fa>)\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>Yellow-orange crust of the still unnamed Fe analogue of Zakharovite. Field of view 3 mm. Specimen and photo Leon Hupperichs.\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>","Leon Hupperichs",562,521,{"id":134,"source_url":135,"license_code":136,"credit_html":137,"title":138,"description":139,"author":140,"original_width":141,"original_height":142},27280,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=34653495","Public domain","Modris Baum, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=34653495\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Makatite, Zakharovite, Natrolite-255464.jpg","\u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FMakatite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Makatite\">Makatite\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FZakharovite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Zakharovite\">Zakharovite\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FNatrolite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Natrolite\">Natrolite\u003C\u002Fa>\n\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>Locality: Demix-Varennes quarry, Saint-Amable sill, Varennes &amp; St-Amable, Lajemmerais RCM, Montérégie, Québec, Canada\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>Size ~ 1.7 x 3 cm. Found Sept 2000. MOB coll.\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>The faintly greenish radiating makatite was associated with (relatively!) abundant varennesite. But on this specimen the orange\u002Fbrown areas are zakharovite, not varennesite. The dark areas in the makatite are terminations of stubby natrolite xls. In other specimens from this find a few dark \"sea green\" blades of makatite are embedded in the paler material.\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>","Modris Baum",693,1024,{"id":144,"source_url":145,"license_code":136,"credit_html":146,"title":147,"description":148,"author":140,"original_width":142,"original_height":149},27281,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=34657281","Modris Baum, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=34657281\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Makatite, Zakharovite-449520.jpg","\u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FMakatite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Makatite\">Makatite\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FZakharovite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Zakharovite\">Zakharovite\u003C\u002Fa>\n\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>\u003Ci>Locality:\u003C\u002Fi> Demix-Varennes quarry, Saint-Amable sill, Varennes &amp; St-Amable, Lajemmerais RCM, Montérégie, Québec, Canada\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>\u003Ci>Field of view:\u003C\u002Fi> ~6½ x 4⅓ mm.\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>\u003Ci>Description:\u003C\u002Fi> Fibrous makatite with a hint of the “sea green” color characteristic of this find associazted with “mustard” – zakharovite. Found Sept 2000. MOB coll. It can be very difficult to distinguish zakharovite from “smectite group” at STA but in this case the “flake size” seems too large for the more powdery smectite. However, even under high magnification I only see a very few xls with hexagonal shape – perhaps wishful thinking. The dark areas in the makatite are natrolite terminations trying to push through. The dark spots in the “mustard” are something else. Close inspection shows rounded red\u002Fbrown blobs. I don’t know what they are. This material is from a hydrothermalite with (relatively) abundant varennesite.\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>",696,{"id":151,"source_url":152,"license_code":136,"credit_html":153,"title":154,"description":155,"author":140,"original_width":156,"original_height":157},23907,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=124828899","Modris Baum, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=124828899\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Eudialyte, Zakharovite-1168327.jpg","\u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FEudialyte\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Eudialyte\">Eudialyte\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FZakharovite\" class=\"extiw\" title=\"en:Zakharovite\">Zakharovite\u003C\u002Fa>\n\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>\u003Cdl>\u003Cdd>\u003Ci>Field of view:\u003C\u002Fi> 3.5 mm\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>\u003Ci>Locality:\u003C\u002Fi> Demix-Varennes quarry, Saint-Amable sill, Varennes &amp; St-Amable, Lajemmerais RCM, Montérégie, Québec, Canada\u003C\u002Fdd>\n\u003Cdd>\u003Ci>Description:\u003C\u002Fi> This photo shows altering eudialyte, engulfed by zakharovite. The eudialyte aggregates look like tiny “hams”, with interiors that are still pink but with exteriors that look like fatty rinds. Broken crystals show that the interiors are still quite gemmy, so the alteration is only skin-deep. For an interesting example of alteration that has progressed further, making the eudilayte look like some sort of mckelveyite group mineral, see \u003Ca rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external free\" href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.mindat.org\u002Fphoto-1168328.html\">https:\u002F\u002Fwww.mindat.org\u002Fphoto-1168328.html\u003C\u002Fa>. This is from the same find as \u003Ca rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external free\" href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.mindat.org\u002Fphoto-453481.html\">https:\u002F\u002Fwww.mindat.org\u002Fphoto-453481.html\u003C\u002Fa>, for which the zakharovite was verified via SEM-EDS. This zakharovite is interesting because some of it appears to be altering, even to the point of becoming (possible) todorokite. (The latter is shown in \u003Ca rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external free\" href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.mindat.org\u002Fphoto-453486.html\">https:\u002F\u002Fwww.mindat.org\u002Fphoto-453486.html\u003C\u002Fa>). Note: I have labeled it as \"eudialyte\" because \"plain vanilla\" eudialyte is till (2021) the only validated AGM mineral here. But not very many samples from here have been fully analyzed (e.g. va WDS), so things could change. As for what the \"eudialyte\" is altering to, \"terskite\" might be one possibility. But that's TBD - if it can.\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>\u003C\u002Fdd>\u003C\u002Fdl>",4774,3214,[],[160,161],"IMA1981-049","Unnamed (MSH UK-38)",[163,167,171,176,180,183,186,190,194],{"lang":164,"names":165},"af",[166],"Zakharoviet",{"lang":168,"names":169},"ca",[170],"zakharovita",{"lang":172,"names":173},"de",[174,175],"IMA 1981-049","Zakharovit",{"lang":177,"names":178},"eu",[179],"Zakharovita",{"lang":181,"names":182},"fr",[7],{"lang":184,"names":185},"it",[7],{"lang":187,"names":188},"ru",[189],"Захаровит",{"lang":191,"names":192},"ta",[160,193],"சகாரோவைட்டு",{"lang":195,"names":196},"zh",[197],"扎哈罗夫石","Q4023739",{"history":11,"applications":11}]