Abstract
Smythite was found at the Silverfields Mine, Cobalt, Ontario, where it occurs in two distinctly different sulfide assemblages. Microprobe analyses of these smythites result in a composition of Fe9S11 (≈Fe3·25S4), with a measured density of 4.33 g/cm3 (4.32 g/cm3 calculated). Unit-cell dimensions referred to the cell described by Erd et al. in 1957, apparently not the true cell, at 25°C are a = 3.4651 ± 0.0005 Å, c = 34.34 ± 0.02 Å. X-ray powder diffraction study at elevated temperatures indicates the presence of a polymorphic transition at approximately 65°C. Precession photographs taken at room temperature reveal a cell with a doubling of the a axis; the symmetry of this larger cell is not R3m but possibly primitive hexagonal. Smythite from Cobalt is universally twinned (twin law: 180° rotation about [00.1]). It lacks the perfect basal cleavage typical of Indiana smythite. Its appearance is very similar to that of pyrrhotite, and only X-ray diffraction study enables one to tell them apart; smythite is, therefore, undoubtedly more common in nature than the four reported occurrences suggest.