Images
  
  Formula: Pd8Sb2.5As0.5
  
  Arsenide of palladium and 
  antimony 
  
  Crystal System: Trigonal
  
  Specific gravity: 11.2 calculated
  
  Hardness: 6
  
  Colour: Brassy ye+llow
  
  Common impurities: Cu,Sn
  
  Environments
  
  Sedimentary environments
  
Hydrothermal environments
  Mertieite II occurs associated with gold, 
  sperrylite, laurite, 
  platarsite, ruthenarsenite, 
  mertieite I, genkinite, 
  platinum-iridium-osmium 
  alloys, a platinum-iron alloy, 
  stibiopalladinite, 
  chalcocite, bornite, 
  heazlewoodite, galena, 
  chalcopyrite, pentlandite, 
  valleriite, hauchecornite, 
  parkerite and chromite 
  (HOM).
  
  Localities
  
  At the Oktyabrsky Mine, Talnakh Cu-Ni Deposit, Noril'sk, Putoran Plateau, Taimyr Peninsula, Taymyrskiy Autonomous 
  Okrug, Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia, mertieite II occurs above massive 
  cubanite–mooihoekite ore 
  (HOM).
  
  At the Darya River sediments, Sakha Republic, Russia, coarse-grained mertieite II crystals (up to 2.5 mm 
  across) have been found with inclusions of sperrylite and 
  intergrown with keithconnite, 
  cooperite-braggite, a 
  platinum-palladium-mercury 
  alloy, a (Pd,Pt)9Te phase and a 
  gold-silver alloy. The 
  primary 
  platinum group mineral assemblage underwent alteration with formation of 
  a very fine-grained mixture of palladium-bearing oxides and hydrated 
  oxides, occasionally intergrown with goethite. The 
  palladium-oxide-bearing compounds formed after (1) mertieite-II 
  (2) keithconnite and 
  (3) potarite. The variably oxidised and hydrated 
  platinum group mineral assemblage can be attributed to 
  supergene alteration and small-scale element redistribution 
  under cool climatic conditions with a limited degree of leaching 
  (MM 69.6.981–994).
  
  At the type locality, Fox Gulch, Salmon River - Red Mountain District, Goodnews Bay, Bethel Census Area, Alaska, 
  USA, mertieite II occurs as fine grains in precious metal placer concentrates, apparently derived from an 
  ultramafic source rock 
  (HOM).
  
  Back to Minerals