Tsumebite is a rare phosphate mineral named in 1912 after the locality where it was first found, the Tsumeb mine in Namibia, well known to mineral collectors for the wide range of minerals found there. Tsumebite is a compound phosphate and sulfate of lead and copper, with hydroxyl, formula Pb2Cu. There is a similar mineral called arsentsumebite, where the phosphate groupPO4 is replaced by the arsenate group AsO4, giving the formula Pb2Cu. Both minerals are members of the brackebuschite group.
The structure of the brackebuschite group minerals is composed of B-6octahedra, two non-equivalent TO4tetrahedra, TO4 and TO4, and two different irregular polyhedra of large cations. B and T represent different elements in different members of the group. Chains formed from the B octahedra link through the oxygens of TO4 tetrahedra, while the large cation polyhedra form double chains parallel to the b crystal axis through edge sharing with TO4 tetrahedra. The result is a tight three-dimensional structure. In tsumebite copper ions occupy the B sites, and phosphorus and sulfur occupy the T sites. Lead is the large cation.
Unit cell parameters are a = 8.69 Å, b = 5.78 Å, c = 7.86 Å, β = 111.87° or a = 8.70 Å, b = 5.80 Å, c = 7.85 Å, β = 111.5°.
Optical properties
Tsumebite is an emerald-green color, transparent and green in transmitted light, with a green streak and an adamantine to vitreous luster. It is biaxial with refractive indices Nx = 1.885 to 1.900, Ny = 1.920 and Nz = 1.942 to 1.956. It is faintly pleochroic with X = Y = very pale blue to colorless and Z = robin's-egg-blue.
Tsumebite is a rare secondary mineral in the oxidised zone of some arsenic-bearing lead-copper deposits, with other lead-bearing phosphates and sulfates. Associated minerals include azurite, smithsonite, malachite, cerussite, mimetite, wulfenite and olivenite. The type locality is the Tsumeb mine, Tsumeb, Otjikoto Region, Namibia. The Handbook of Mineralogy states that the type material was destroyed by bombing, but does not indicate when or where. Tsumebite occurs at Morenci, Arizona, predominantly as twinned crystals associated with wulfenite, olivenite and the hyalite variety of opal. At Broken Hill, New South Wales, Australia, tsumebite has been found as lustrous pale blue to bluish green crystals. It usually occurs with yellow crusts of corkite-hinsdalite, colorless to white pyromorphiteneedles and sprays of pale greyish green zincian libethenite. Less commonly found with scholzite and torbernite.