Mineral Database (Saesneg yn unig)
Carbonate-hydroxylapatite
Crystal System: Hexagonal
Formula: Ca5(PO4,CO3)3(OH,F,O)
Status of Occurrence: Confirmed Occurrence - 1st UK recording
Distribution: Locally Abundant
Chemical Composition: Calcium phosphate carbonate hydroxide
Method(s) of Verification: none.
Chemical Group:
- Phosphates
Geological Context:
- Sedimentary : diagenetic
Introduction: carbonate-hydroxylapatite, is also known as dahlite.
Occurrence in Wales: Oakley (1934) reported the occurrence of dahlite at TÅ· Mawr, Rumney, South Wales. This account represents the first record of this mineral in the British Isles. More recently Niedermeyer & Langbein (1989) have shown that bacteriogenic pebble coatings (co-called 'bolopora') which occur in rocks of Arenig age over a wide area of Wales, are composed of carbonate-hydroxylapatite.
Key Localities:
- TÅ· Mawr, Rumney, South Wales: pearl-like bodies in cells of fossil corals from Silurian strata, where identified as carbonate-hydroxylapatite by Oakley (1934).
References:
- Probable microbial origin of Ordovician (Arenig) phosphatic pebble coats ('Bolopora') from North Wales, U.K. Geological Magazine, 126, 691-698.
- Phosphatic calculi in Silurian Polyzoa. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B, 116, 296-314.