1Chi Ma,2,3Alan E. Rubin
American Mineralogist 111, 1186-1191 Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.2138/am-2025-10003]
1Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, U.S.A.
2Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095, U.S.A.
3Maine Mineral & Gem Museum, 99 Main Street, P.O. Box 500, Bethel, Maine 04217, U.S.A.
Copyright: The Mineralogical Society of America
Colomeraite (IMA 2021-061), with an end-member formula NaTi3+Si2O6, is a new Na pyroxene identified in the Colomera IIE iron meteorite. Colomeraite occurs with albite and K-feldspar in a silicate inclusion. The mean chemical composition of type colomeraite by electron probe microanalysis is (wt%) SiO2 54.82, Ti2O3 17.15, TiO2 5.58, NaO2 12.33, MgO 3.93, FeO 3.59, CaO 1.98, MnO 0.28, Al2O3 0.24, Cr2O3 0.13, K2O 0.02, total 100.05, giving rise to an empirical formula of (Na0.88Ca0.08Mg0.04)(Mg0.17Fe0.11Mn0.01Al0.01)Si2.01O6, with Ti3+ and Ti4+ partitioned, based on stoichiometry. Colomeraite has the C2/c diopside-type structure with a = 9.70(1) Å, b = 8.88(1) Å, c = 5.30(1) Å, β = 106.8(1)°, V = 437(2) Å3, and Z = 4, as revealed by electron backscatter diffraction. The calculated density using the measured composition is 3.36 g/cm3. Colomeraite is a high-pressure and high-temperature Na-Ti3+-pyroxene, probably formed from an alkali plagioclase-Ti-rich phase melt via impact mixing of metal and silicates under extremely reducing conditions. The mineral is named after the host meteorite “Colomera.”