uraninite

uraninite
/yoo ran"euh nuyt', -ray"neuh-/, n.
a mineral, probably originally uranium dioxide, UO2, but altered by radioactive decay, and usually containing uranium trioxide, lead, radium, and helium, occurring in several varieties, including pitchblende: the most important ore of uranium.
[1875-80; URAN(IUM) + -IN2 + -ITE1]

* * *

Uranium dioxide (UO2), a major oxide mineral of uranium.

Uraninite is radioactive and usually forms black, gray, or brown crystals that are moderately hard and generally opaque. The elements uranium and radium were first extracted from uraninite ore from what is now the Czech Republic. It has also been mined in Germany and Canada, and in the Colorado Plateau (U.S.). See also pitchblende.

Uraninite in pitchblende from Great Bear Lake, Northwest Territories, embedded (for display) in a ...

By courtesy of the Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago; photograph, John H. Gerard

* * *

 a major ore mineral of uranium (uranium processing), uranium dioxide (UO2). Uraninite usually forms black, gray, or brown crystals that are moderately hard and generally opaque. A variety of uraninite ore that is dense and found in granular masses with a greasy lustre is called pitchblende. Uraninite is radioactive and is the chief source of uranium.

      The element uranium was discovered by M.H. Klaproth (Klaproth, Martin Heinrich) in 1789 in uraninite from Joachimsthal (now Jáchymov, Czech Republic). Radium was first extracted from uraninite ore from the same locality by Pierre and Marie Curie and G. Bémont in 1898.

      Uraninite has been obtained from hydrothermal vein deposits, such as those at Jáchymov and in adjacent places in the Ore Mountains (Erzgebirge) in Germany. Other vein deposits occur at Great Bear Lake in the Northwest Territories of Canada and in the Lake Athabasca district of Alberta and Saskatchewan. Uraninite is also recovered as a by-product from the conglomeratic gold ores of the Witwatersrand, S.Af., and from conglomerate rocks in the Elliot Lake area, Ont. Important deposits of fine-grained uraninite occur in sedimentary rocks, chiefly sandstones, in the Colorado Plateau area of the western United States. Deposits in sandstones often are extensively oxidized to carnotite and other secondary uranyl minerals, which may themselves constitute important uranium ores. Uraninite is widespread as a well-crystallized accessory mineral in pegmatites (pegmatite), but such occurrences are of little or no economic importance. Fine specimens have been found in pegmatites at Wilberforce, Ont.; the Spruce Pine district, N.C.; and Grafton, N.H.

      Through oxidation the composition of uraninite varies between UO2 and UO3. thorium atoms can substitute for uranium atoms in the crystal structure, so that a complete solid-solution series extends to thorianite. Some varieties in this series contain appreciable amounts of rare earths, particularly cerium. Types rich in thorium and rare earths occur principally in pegmatites; some have been designated by varietal names. Lead accumulates in uraninite as a product of the radioactive decay of uranium and thorium; the amount present can be used to calculate the geologic age of the mineral. Uraninite often alters to yellow or orange-red hydrated oxides (e.g., gummite) and to greenish yellow silicates. It is not resistant to weathering, and the uranium may be leached and redeposited locally as autunite, torbernite, or other secondary minerals. For detailed physical properties, see oxide mineral (table).

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • URANINITE — L’uraninite est le principal minerai d’uranium et de radium et doit son nom au premier de ces métaux. C’est un dioxyde d’uranium, mais, dans la nature, celui ci est plus ou moins oxydé, et, de ce fait, sa composition varie entre deux pôles: UO2… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Uraninite — U*ran i*nite, n. (Min.) A mineral consisting chiefly of uranium oxide with some lead, thorium, etc., occurring in black octahedrons, also in masses with a pitchlike luster; pitchblende. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • uraninite — [yoo rā′nə nīt΄, yo͞oran′ənīt΄] n. [< URANIUM + IN1 + ITE1] a hard, very heavy, dark colored, radioactive mineral, UO2, the chief ore of uranium; uranium oxide: cf. PITCHBLENDE …   English World dictionary

  • Uraninite — Pitchblende redirects here. For other uses, see Pitchblende (disambiguation). Uraninite Pitchblende form Niederschlema Alberoda deposit, Germany General …   Wikipedia

  • uraninite — noun Etymology: German Uranin uraninite (from New Latin uranium) + English ite Date: 1879 a a black octahedral mineral that consists of an oxide of uranium which usually contains thorium, lead, and rare earth elements and is the chief ore of… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • uraninite — uraninitas statusas T sritis chemija apibrėžtis UO₂ ir UO₃ mišinys, oksidų klasės mineralas. atitikmenys: angl. uraninite rus. уранинит …   Chemijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • uraninite — noun a mineral consisting of uranium oxide and trace amounts of radium and thorium and polonium and lead and helium; uraninite in massive form is called pitchblende which is the chief uranium ore • Syn: ↑pitchblende • Hypernyms: ↑uranium ore •… …   Useful english dictionary

  • Uraninite — Pechblende Pechblende Catégorie III : oxydes et hydroxydes Général …   Wikipédia en Français

  • uraninite — noun Any of several brownish black forms of uranium dioxide, UO, (especially pitchblende) that is the chief ore of uranium; it is isomorphous with thorianite …   Wiktionary

  • uraninite — SYN: pitchblende. * * * ura·ni·nite yu̇ rā nə .nīt n a mineral that is basically a black octahedral or cubic oxide of uranium containing lead, thorium, and rare earth elements and that is the chief ore of uranium …   Medical dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”