4.5 Article

Colours of Gemmy Phosphates from the Gava Neolithic Mines (Catalonia, Spain): Origin and Archaeological Significance

Journal

MINERALS
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/min12030368

Keywords

colour; variscite; turquoise; phosphates; neolithic mines; Gava

Funding

  1. Generalitat de Catalunya [2014 SGR 1661, 2014/100820, 2017 SGR 995, CLT009/1800044]
  2. MCIN/AEI [RYC2016-21108]
  3. ESF Investing in your future (EU)

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The parameters involved in variscite colors were determined through a 3D study of the distribution of mineral phases. The study found that depth is not directly related to color. The content of Cr3+ in variscite affects its color, and when mixed with white minerals such as quartz or kandite, the colors of variscite and turquoise become paler.
In the Neolithic Gava mines, variscite and turquoise were exploited for ornaments manufacturing, although some prospective pits and tunnels were dug on other similar greenish minerals such as smectite or kandite. A 3D study of the distribution of mineral phases allows us to determine the parameters involved in variscite colours. Methods are comprised of quantitative colourimetry, thin section petrography, SEM-BSE-EDS, EMPA, XRD, Raman spectroscopy, and Fe-57 Mossbauer spectrometry. Mapping of the mines indicates that colour is not directly dependent on depth. Although variscite from Gava is poor in Cr3+ and V+3 compared with gemmy variscite from other localities, the deep green samples content has the highest values of Cr3+. In the case of cryptocrystalline mixtures with jarosite, phosphosiderite, or goethite, variscite tends to acquire a greenish brown to olivaceous hue. If white minerals such as quartz, kandite, crandallite, or alunite are involved in the mixtures, variscite and turquoise colours become paler.

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