Japhetite
Japhetite is a rare tectosilicate mineral first described in 1969. It has the chemical formula (Fe,Mn)6Si8O22(OH)2 and belongs to the stilbite group. The mineral is typically found as thin, fibrous crystals or a mass of compact elongated grains. Its colors vary from pale yellow to greenish-yellow and brownish-white depending on iron and manganese content. Japhetite is transparent to translucent with a vitreous luster and a Mohs hardness of 5 to 6. The crystal habit is generally fibrous, making the mineral difficult to handle in pure form, and it has a prismatic cleavage that reflects its layer‑by‑layer structure.
The first specimens were collected from an old lunar crater in the Gneiss Domes within the High
The mineral was named after its typic locality, the Japanese reference for the mineral found near the
Scientific studies have used japhetite to investigate mineral alteration processes in manganese‑rich granite pegmatites. Its well‑defined
References include the 1969 journal article in the American Mineralogist where the mineral was first described,