Ophirite is a tungstate mineral first discovered in the Ophir Hill Consolidated mine at Ophir district, Oquirrh Mountains, Tooele County, Utah, United States of America. It was found underground near a calcite cave in one veinlet, six centimeters wide by one meter long, surrounded by different sulfides. Before the closing of the mine in 1972, it was dominated by sulfide minerals, and the Ophir district was known for being a source of zinc, copper, silver, and lead ores. The crystals are formed as tablets. It is the first known mineral to contain a heteropolyanion, a lacunary defect derivative of the Keggin anion. The chemical formula of ophirite is Ca2Mg4[Zn2Mn3+2(H2O)2(Fe3+W9O34)2] · 46•H2O. The mineral has been approved by the Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names, IMA, to be named ophirite for its type locality, the Ophir Consolidated mine.