A new, previously unknown mineral was found in 1964 by and
H. Sorensen during a joint expedition to South
Greenland, and chemical and optical analysis and identification of the mineral were carried out by them together with
Marianna Bezsmertnaya on the basis of the Moscow . More detailed data about the mineral were obtained later by S. B. Maslenkov using an X-ray microprobe at the Institute of Ferrous Metals. In 1969, Evgeny Semyonov described the history of the discovery of the mineral in a separate book dedicated to the expedition to South Greenland and the mineralogy of this area: Cuprostibite discovered by E. I. Semenov and H. Sorensen and studied by them together with
M. S. Bezsmertnaya. The mineral is found in the large
ussingite pegmatite of Mount Nakalak in association with minute
Loellingite segregations. Cuprostibite forms opaque grains 1-2 mm in size, black, and on fresh chips steel-gray in color with a distinct violet-red tint. The
lustre is strong, metallic. The mineral
is soft. Cuprostibite was originally defined as a natural copper stibnite with the formula Cu5Sb2 and was considered as such for almost five years. It received its name, consisting of two roots, in 1969 — according to the composition that was considered relevant at that time.
Thallium, periodically detected in the composition of cuprostibite, was initially attributed to the number of impurities introduced from surrounding rocks and minerals, in particular
chalcotallite. Meanwhile, the formula of the mineral was refined in the late 1990s to the modern form Cu2(
Sb,
Tl), when it was determined that if present in the mineral (up to 3 wt%) thallium is included in its chemical composition. Also,
sulfur was found in some samples from the type deposit of Mount Nakkaalaaq (
Greenland), so the proportional formula for Greenland cuprostibite increased to four components: Cu2.00(Sb0.82S0.08Tl0.04)Σ=0.94 However, the name of the mineral remains the same. Cuprostibite samples obtained from the Greenlandic Kangerdluarsuk plateau and from the Swedish Langbaan do not contain
thallium and
sulfur impurities. Their ideal formula is also different from the original one and looks like Cu2Sb. == Properties ==