Thorianite
Thorianite is a rare thorium oxide mineral, ThO2. It was originally described by Ananda Coomaraswamy in 1904 as uraninite, but recognized as a new species by Wyndham R. Dunstan. It was so named by Dunstan on account of its high percentage of thorium; it also contains the oxides of uranium, lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium and neodymium. Helium is present, and the mineral is slightly less radioactive than pitchblende, but is harder to shield due to its high energy gamma rays. It is common in the alluvial gem-gravels of Sri Lanka, where it occurs mostly as water-worn, small, heavy, black, cubic crystals. The largest crystals are usually near 1.5 cm. Larger crystals, up to, have been reported from Madagascar.
Chemistry
Based on color, specific gravity and composition three types of thorianite are distinguished:- α-thorianite
- β-thorianite
- γ-thorianite
Varieties
- Aldanite – a variety of thorianite containing 14.9% to 29.0% UO2 and 11.2% to 12.5% PbO.
- Uranothorianite
- Thorianite Cerian
- ''Thorianite La bearing''
Occurrence
Usually found in alluvial deposits, beach sands, heavy mineral placers, and pegmatites.- Sri Lanka – In stream gravels, Galle district, Southern Province; Balangoda district; near Kodrugala, Sabaragamuwa Province; and from a pegmatite in Bambarabotuwa area.
- India – Reported from beach sands of Travancore.
- Madagascar – Found in alluvial deposits of Betroka and Andolobe. Also as very large crystals from Fort Dauphin; at Andranondambo and other localities.
- Russia – In black sands of a gold placer on Boshogoch River, Transbaikalia, Siberia; in the Kovdor Massif by Kovdor, Kola Peninsula; in the Yenisei Range, Siberia.
- United States – reported from Easton, Pennsylvania; black sands in Missouri River, near Helena, Montana; Scott River, Siskiyou County, California; black sands in Nixon Fork and Wiseman districts, Alaska.
- Canada – Reported with uraninite in a pegmatite on Charlebois Lake, east of Lake Athabasca; Uranon variety reported from pegmatite and metesomatized zones in crystalline limestones from many locations in Quebec and Ontario.
- South Africa – Occurs with baddeleyite as an accessory in carbonatite at Phalaborwa, Eastern Transvaal.
- Democratic Republic of Congo - Kasaï region