Eddavidite, Cu 12 Pb 2 O 15 Br 2 , a New Mineral Species, and Its Solid Solution with Murdochite, Cu 12 Pb 2 O 15 Cl 2

: Eddavidite is a new mineral species (IMA2018-010) with ideal formula, Cu 12 Pb 2 O 15 Br 2 , and cubic Fm3m symmetry: a = 9.2407(9) Å; V = 789.1(2) Å 3 ; Z = 2. Eddavidite is the bromine analog of murdochite

-ray diffraction profiles of eddavidite and murdochite are nearly indistinguishable.0.12 ).Type locality samples contain up to 67% eddavidite component, while Ojuela mine samples contain up to 62%.Mixed eddavidite-murdochite crystals show forms {100} and {111}; the habit grades from cubic through cuboctahedral to octahedral.Mixed eddavidite-murdochite crystals exhibit good cleavage on {111}.Eddavidite is black, opaque with submetallic luster, and visually indistinguishable from intergrown murdochite.Its Mohs hardness is 4; d meas.= 6.33 g/cm 3 , d calc.= 6.45 g/cm 3 .The crystal structure, refined to R = 0.0112, consists of corner-sharing square planar CuO 4 units, arranged in Cu 12 O 24 metal oxide clusters, which encapsulate Br atoms.PbO 8 cubes share edges with Cu 12 O 24 clusters in a continuous framework.Eddavidite incorporates bromine remaining after desiccation of paleo-seawater at its two known localities, which were both once situated along the Western Interior Seaway.

Introduction
The recognition of eddavidite arises from decades of investigations into the ontology of murdochite.Murdochite was first described from the Mammoth mine, Tiger, Arizona in 1955 [1,2].Wet chemical analysis found major lead, copper, and oxygen.A contemporaneous crystal structure model was based upon that of rock salt, with a unit cell content of 32 O atoms in cubic closest packed arrangement and 32 concomitant octahedral sites occupied by an ordered arrangement of 24 Cu, 4 Pb, and 4 vacancies.However, the crystal structure solution gave a poor reliability factor (R~0.17) [3].The original description and separate crystal structure study both gave a stoichiometric formula for murdochite: Cu 6 PbO 8 [2,3] Two independent investigations, both published in 1970, evinced certain complexities in the mineral murdochite.One study [4] showed pronounced zoning under reflected light in material from Anarak, Iran.Microprobe analysis revealed higher Pb in bright zones than in dark zones, with PbO 2 and CuO content variations of 2.2 wt.% and 0.9 wt.%, respectively.It was concluded that Cu contents varied inversely with Pb contents, albeit non-stoichiometrically [4].The other study [5] revealed significant Cl and Br for the first time in murdochite, in samples from both the Hansonburg district, New Mexico, and Anarak, Iran [5].Pronounced zoning under reflected light was again noted; however, this was attributed to variable Cl/Br ratios [5].Assuming that halogens substitute for oxygen, a non-stoichiometric formula for murdochite was proposed with excess cations and fixed total anions: Cu 6±x Pb 1±x (O,Cl,Br) 8 [5].
While analyzing a museum sample of Bisbee murdochite (Figure 1), backscattered electron (BSE) imaging showed pronounced zoning.Standardized WDS analysis found domains with atomic Br > Cl.Single-crystal X-ray diffraction study indicated a unit cellsimilar to that of murdochite, though somewhat larger.The new mineral and its name received approval from the Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification (CNMNC) of the International Mineralogical Association (IMA2018-010).
Minerals 2024, 14, x FOR PEER REVIEW 2 of 15 non-stoichiometrically [4].The other study [5] revealed significant Cl and Br for the first time in murdochite, in samples from both the Hansonburg district, New Mexico, and Anarak, Iran [5].Pronounced zoning under reflected light was again noted; however, this was attributed to variable Cl/Br ratios [5].Assuming that halogens substitute for oxygen, a non-stoichiometric formula for murdochite was proposed with excess cations and fixed total anions: Cu6±xPb1±x(O,Cl,Br)8 [5].
A redetermination of the murdochite crystal structure in 1983 found Cu in typical 4 + 2 coordination, consisting of 4 equatorial Cu-O bonds of 1.921 Å and 2 apical halogen separations at 3.261 Å. Pb is coordinated by eight O atoms at the corners of a cube, with Pb-O separations of 2.283 Å [6].The refinement assumed full occupancy of a halogen site, which is distinct from an O site constrained to 0.94 (=15/16) occupancy for charge balance [6].The model converged well (R = 0.027).A non-stoichiometric formula with anion vacancies was proposed for murdochite: Cu 2+ 6Pb 4+ O8−x(Cl,Br)2x (x ≤ 0.5) [6].
While analyzing a museum sample of Bisbee murdochite (Figure 1), backscattered electron (BSE) imaging showed pronounced zoning.Standardized WDS analysis found domains with atomic Br > Cl.Single-crystal X-ray diffraction study indicated a unit cellsimilar to that of murdochite, though somewhat larger.The new mineral and its name received approval from the Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification (CNMNC) of the International Mineralogical Association (IMA2018-010).This study both characterizes the new mineral species eddavidite and further delineates its solid solution series with murdochite.The holotype sample is on deposit at the Minerals 2024, 14, 307 3 of 14 University of Arizona Alfie Norville Gem & Mineral Museum with catalog number 12326 (Figure 1); co-type fragments therefrom are on deposit with the RRUFF Project as sample R050381 (Figure 2).
1977, from which he retired in 1986.
Dr. David became interested in mineral collecting at the age of six when his uncle "Bibby" presented him with a wooden box of mineral specimens.That gift ignited a lifelong passion in Dr. David, who later built a fine mineral collection, the "core" of which went to the Houston Museum of Natural Science in 1995 [13].Unflinchingly, Dr. David started assembling another mineral collection.Dr. David donated 36 fine copper specimens in 2014 and arranged a posthumous gift of his remaining ~450 specimens to the University of Arizona Mineral Museum, the predecessor of the University of Arizona Alfie Norville Gem & Mineral Museum (ANGMM).Dr. David served on the University of Arizona Mineral Museum advisory board from 2007 to 2017, and the ANGMM currently features a gallery of his former specimens.S1).Locality: Southwest mine, Bisbee, Cochise County, Arizona, U.S.A. Sample: RRUFF R050381 (co-type).(right) Octahedral crystal with minor cubic modifications.This sample has a maximum molar Br/(Br + Cl) = 0.52 (Table S1).Locality: Ojuela mine, Mapimí, Durango, Mexico.Sample: NHMLAC 38450.

Materials and Methods
Electron probe microanalyses were performed in WDS mode on a Cameca SX-100 electron microprobe, housed at the Department of Lunar and Planetary Sciences, University of Arizona, with an accelerating voltage of 15 kV, an operating current of 20 nA, and a ~10 µm beam diameter.Standards used were Cu (cuprite from Bisbee, inhouse standard); Pb (NBS glass K0229); Cl (Brazilian scapolite, USNM R6600-1 containing 1.43% Cl); Br (synthetic CsBr); F (synthetic MgF2); Si (San Carlos Fo92 olivine, inhouse standard); Fe (fayalite from Rockport, MA); Cd (Cd metal); K (orthoclase supplied by Penn State); and Ca (anorthite from Hakone, Japan).Data reduction followed the PAP method [14].The normalization of eddavidite formulae differs from that for rock-forming minerals [15], which is based on total anions.For this reason, eddavidite and murdochite formulae were  S1).Locality: Southwest mine, Bisbee, Cochise County, Arizona, U.S.A. Sample: RRUFF R050381 (co-type).(right) Octahedral crystal with minor cubic modifications.This sample has a maximum molar Br/(Br + Cl) = 0.52 (Table S1).Dr. David became interested in mineral collecting at the age of six when his uncle "Bibby" presented him with a wooden box of mineral specimens.That gift ignited a lifelong passion in Dr. David, who later built a fine mineral collection, the "core" of which went to the Houston Museum of Natural Science in 1995 [13].Unflinchingly, Dr. David started assembling another mineral collection.Dr. David donated 36 fine copper specimens in 2014 and arranged a posthumous gift of his remaining ~450 specimens to the University of Arizona Mineral Museum, the predecessor of the University of Arizona Alfie Norville Gem & Mineral Museum (ANGMM).Dr. David served on the University of Arizona Mineral Museum advisory board from 2007 to 2017, and the ANGMM currently features a gallery of his former specimens.

Materials and Methods
Electron probe microanalyses were performed in WDS mode on a Cameca SX-100 electron microprobe, housed at the Department of Lunar and Planetary Sciences, University of Arizona, with an accelerating voltage of 15 kV, an operating current of 20 nA, and a ~10 µm beam diameter.Standards used were Cu (cuprite from Bisbee, inhouse standard); Pb (NBS glass K0229); Cl (Brazilian scapolite, USNM R6600-1 containing 1.43% Cl); Br (synthetic CsBr); F (synthetic MgF 2 ); Si (San Carlos Fo 92 olivine, inhouse standard); Fe (fayalite from Rockport, MA); Cd (Cd metal); K (orthoclase supplied by Penn State); and Ca (anorthite from Hakone, Japan).Data reduction followed the PAP method [14].The normalization of eddavidite formulae differs from that for rock-forming minerals [15], which is based on total anions.For this reason, eddavidite and murdochite formulae were calculated on the basis of 12 Cu apfu (Tables 1 and S1).Additional BSE imaging employed a Hitachi 3400N SEM at Arizona LaserChron Center, Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona.  1 and S1).Additional BSE imaging employe a Hitachi 3400N SEM at Arizona LaserChron Center, Department of Geosciences, Unive sity of Arizona.An X-ray diffraction study was conducted with a Bruker APEX II diffractometer the Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona.The X-ray generator produce MoKα radiation at 45 kV and 40 mA, which is monochromated by a graphite crystal, con centrated by Monocap capillary X-ray optics, and collimated to a width of 350 µm.Th unit cell parameters refined from the powder data are a = 9.2424(67) Å, V = 789.5(17)Å calculated using in-house software [16].The X-ray powder diffraction profile appears i Table 2.An X-ray diffraction study was conducted with a Bruker APEX II diffractometer at the Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona.The X-ray generator produces MoKα radiation at 45 kV and 40 mA, which is monochromated by a graphite crystal, concentrated by Monocap capillary X-ray optics, and collimated to a width of 350 µm.The unit cell parameters refined from the powder data are a = 9.2424(67) Å, V = 789.5(17)Å 3 , calculated using in-house software [16].The X-ray powder diffraction profile appears in Table 2.A quarter sphere of single-crystal X-ray diffraction intensity data were collected from a 70 × 60 × 60 µm crystal fragment.The structure was solved with direct methods, using SHELX-2017 [17].The chemistry of the crystal used in the refinement is given in Table 2.All reflections were indexed with a cubic unit cell.The crystal structure refinement was fixed to the empirical halogen composition: Cu 24 Pb 4 O 30.20 Br 1.98 Cl 1.78 .Details of the crystal structure refinement are given in Table 3; atomic coordinates and displacement parameters appear in Tables 4 and 5.

Occurrence and paragenesis of Eddavidite-Murdochite
The occurrence of eddavidite is correlated with that of murdochite; eddavidite is only known as domains within mixed eddavidite-murdochite crystals.Murdochite occurs in several mines of the Bisbee mining area, Cochise County, Arizona.Murdochite was first recorded in the Higgins mine in 1955 [3], which was the only Bisbee occurrence reported as late as 1981 [18].In 1993, three additional occurrences of murdochite were reported from Bisbee: one in the Shattuck mine and two in the Southwest mine [19].The Graeme family collection also includes murdochite samples from the Uncle Sam, Copper Queen, Holbrook and Cole mines.Murdochite from the Cole mine is associated with rosasite and malachite (Graeme sample R3494).A sample from the Shattuck mine has proven to be murdochite intergrown with plattnerite (Graeme sample 1483).Apart from the Cole mine, the aforementioned mines are tightly grouped in the northwestern portion of the Bisbee mining area [19].In fact, the Copper Queen, Higgins, Holbrook, Shattuck, Southwest, and Uncle Sam mines comprise a single network of interconnected subterranean workings.
The type locality of eddavidite is the 5th level of the Southwest mine in the Bisbee mining area.Cavities containing eddavidite-murdochite occur in limonite pods hosted by Mississippian Escabrosa limestone, formed by fugitive fluids associated with Jurassic porphyry copper mineralization [20].Limonite is a field term for intermixed iron oxideshydroxides not discriminated by laboratory analysis; hematite and goethite are major components.The type occurrence of eddavidite is a large open pocket, ~150 x ~25 , located  S1).Locality: Ojuela mine, Mapimí, Durango, Mexico.Sample: RRUFF R110122.

Occurrence and Paragenesis of Eddavidite-Murdochite
The occurrence of eddavidite is correlated with that of murdochite; eddavidite is only known as domains within mixed eddavidite-murdochite crystals.Murdochite occurs in several mines of the Bisbee mining area, Cochise County, Arizona.Murdochite was first recorded in the Higgins mine in 1955 [3], which was the only Bisbee occurrence reported as late as 1981 [18].In 1993, three additional occurrences of murdochite were reported from Bisbee: one in the Shattuck mine and two in the Southwest mine [19].The Graeme family collection also includes murdochite samples from the Uncle Sam, Copper Queen, Holbrook and Cole mines.Murdochite from the Cole mine is associated with rosasite and malachite (Graeme sample R3494).A sample from the Shattuck mine has proven to be murdochite intergrown with plattnerite (Graeme sample 1483).Apart from the Cole mine, the aforementioned mines are tightly grouped in the northwestern portion of the Bisbee mining area [19].In fact, the Copper Queen, Higgins, Holbrook, Shattuck, Southwest, and Uncle Sam mines comprise a single network of interconnected subterranean workings.
The type locality of eddavidite is the 5th level of the Southwest mine in the Bisbee mining area.Cavities containing eddavidite-murdochite occur in limonite pods hosted by Mississippian Escabrosa limestone, formed by fugitive fluids associated with Jurassic porphyry copper mineralization [20].Limonite is a field term for intermixed iron oxideshydroxides not discriminated by laboratory analysis; hematite and goethite are major components.The type occurrence of eddavidite is a large open pocket, ~150' x ~25', located at the intersection of the Czar fault and an unnamed fault.Towards the 54th crosscut on the 5th level of the Southwest mine, there is minor malachite, and the stope ceiling is covered in later plumose, cream-colored calcite.While most of the limonite is pulverent massive, rare limonite casts of former gypsum crystals are also present.Mixed murdochite-eddavidite crystals form both directly on limonite and are also perched on acicular malachite, all of which precede a late generation of bladed calcite.The holotype sample follows the sequence limonite → malachite → murdochite-eddavidite → calcite.Nearby in this same orebody, cuprite nodules host fine cuprite crystals and a suite of exotic copper species, including atacamite, claringbullite, nantokite, paratacamite, and spangolite [19].Surprisingly, unit cell determination and SEM-EDS chemistry of supposed claringbullite from the Southwest mine revealed its identity as barlowite (RRUFF sample R110007).
During this investigation, microprobe analysis found eddavidite domains in murdochite dominated crystals from the Ojuela mine complex, Mapimí mining district, Durango, Mexico.The Ojuela mine exploits oxidized Pb-Ag ores consisting of cerussite and argentiferous galena [21,22].Attractive specimens of wulfenite and mimetite are recovered as a byproduct of artisanal lead-silver mining [23].The first record of murdochite in the Ojuela mine is a mere listing in a 1956 paper describing an unrelated zinc arsenate [24].Murdochite occurs in a complex assemblage with aurichalcite, calcite, hydrozincite, hemimorphite, malachite, plattnerite, and rosasite.While not specifically associated with eddavidite, and not found all together on a single specimen, each of these species occurs in contact with murdochite.Also known in this assemblage are scrutinyite [25], fluorite, and baryte; none of which have yet been observed in association with murdochite (or eddavidite).Two samples containing eddavidite from the Ojuela mine are recognized in this study: RRUFF R110122 (Figure 3), which is associated with aurichalcite, and NHMLAC 38450 (Table S1).

Zoning in Eddavidite-Murdochite
Zoning in murdochite has been noticed and discussed since 1970 [4,5].This study finds no correlation between zoning under BSE and either Br content or molar Br/(Br + Cl) ratio.Spots 61 and 71 on RRUFF sample R110122, murdochite-eddavidite from the Ojuela mine, have Br contents of 3.50 wt.% and 5.03 wt.%, respectively.Sample R110122 also has a significant range of molar Br/(Br + Cl): 0.62-0.37;nevertheless, it appears free of zoning (Figure 5).Notably, sample R110122 has <1% standard deviation in its PbO2 contents and appears rather homogenous in BSE imaging.
Zoning in eddavidite-murdochite seems to correlate with variations in Pb/Cu ratio.This work found both eddavidite and murdochite in the Bisbee mining area, with molar Br/(Br + Cl) ranging from 0.21 to 0.69 (Tables 1 and S1).Two separate crystals from the type sample (Tables 1 and S1) give the following molar Br/(Br + Cl) values: lows of 0.23 and 0.24, highs of 0.53 and 0.64, and means of 0.39 and 0.53, respectively.Graeme sample 1483 from the Shattuck mine has the highest molar Br/(Br + Cl) seen in this study: Minerals 2024, 14, 307 8 of 14 0.69 (Table S1).Nevertheless, Graeme sample 1483 is predominantly murdochite with mean molar Br/(Br + Cl) = 0.34 (Table S1).Each spot analysis of Bisbee murdochite (and eddavidite) performed in this study revealed elevated Br (i.e., Br/(Br + Cl) > 0.20).
As previously proposed for murdochite in 1970 [4], zoning in mixed murdochiteeddavidite correlates with variable Pb/Cu.As the analyses reported herein are normalized to 12 Cu apfu, variable Pb/Cu simplifies to Pb apfu (Tables 1 and S1).In the case of R180001 (Table S1, Figure 6), the backscattered electron (BSE) contribution from ±0.06 apfu Pb vs.
Minerals 2024, 14, x FOR PEER REVIEW calculated on the basis of 12 Cu apfu (Tables 1 and S1).Addition a Hitachi 3400N SEM at Arizona LaserChron Center, Departme sity of Arizona.An X-ray diffraction study was conducted with a Bruker the Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona.The MoKα radiation at 45 kV and 40 mA, which is monochromated centrated by Monocap capillary X-ray optics, and collimated unit cell parameters refined from the powder data are a = 9.24 calculated using in-house software [16].The X-ray powder diff Table 2. Considering both the strong BSE response of Pb and the established non-stoichiometry in the crystal structure [6], eddavidite cannot be distinguished from murdochite simply by BSE imaging.
The Cu 12 O 24 metal cluster in eddavidite (and isostructural murdochite) is a 26-sided polyhedron with 8 triangular faces and 18 square faces, which is known as a rhombicuboctahedron [26].A decorated version of this metal cluster with composition Cu 18 O 24 is found in the structure of BaCuO 2 [27].Cu 12 O 24 clusters in eddavidite (and murdochite) share faces to build a framework of ideal bulk composition Cu 3 O 4 (Figure 9).Some chemical analyses show trace F (Table 1 and Table S1).As the anionic radius of F -is much smaller than that of Cl -or Br -[28], trace F presumably substitutes for O.This is similar to the ordering of F and Cl-Br into distinct crystallographic sites as determined for claringbullite-barlowite [29,30], both of which occur at the type locality for eddavidite.
octahedron [26].A decorated version of this metal cluster with composition Cu18O24 is found in the structure of BaCuO2 [27].Cu12O24 clusters in eddavidite (and murdochite) share faces to build a framework of ideal bulk composition Cu3O4 (Figure 9).Some chemical analyses show trace F (Tables 1 and S1).As the anionic radius of F -is much smaller than that of Cl -or Br -[28], trace F presumably substitutes for O.This is similar to the ordering of F and Cl-Br into distinct crystallographic sites as determined for claringbullite-barlowite [29,30], both of which occur at the type locality for eddavidite.polyhedron with 8 triangular faces and 18 square faces, which is known as a rhombicuboctahedron [26].A decorated version of this metal cluster with composition Cu18O24 is found in the structure of BaCuO2 [27].Cu12O24 clusters in eddavidite (and murdochite) share faces to build a framework of ideal bulk composition Cu3O4 (Figure 9).Some chemical analyses show trace F (Tables 1 and S1).As the anionic radius of F -is much smaller than that of Cl -or Br -[28], trace F presumably substitutes for O.This is similar to the ordering of F and Cl-Br into distinct crystallographic sites as determined for claringbullite-barlowite [29,30], both of which occur at the type locality for eddavidite.

Origin of Eddavidite
This study reports eddavidite from two separate mining areas: Bisbee, Arizona, USA, and Mapimí, Durango, Mexico.Both mining areas exploit large carbonate replacement systems, with Bisbee relatively richer in Cu than Pb-Zn-Ag [18,19], whereas Mapimí is richer in Pb-Zn-Ag than Cu [21][22][23].Despite their overland separation of ~850 km, Bisbee and Mapimí share a significant chapter of geological history.Between 105 and 85 Ma, both localities were submerged in the paleo-oceanic Western Interior Seaway [31,32].The subsequent orogeny of the Sierra Madre Occidental left Bisbee and Mapimí in separate watersheds, specifically the endorheic Bolson de Mapimí and the Bisbee Basin [33].Presumably these basins trapped seawater from the Western Interior Seaway, which eventually desiccated.
When halite precipitates from seawater, its crystalline lattice does not readily accommodate Br, leaving behind residual brines relatively enriched in Br [34][35][36].Evaporation of seawater increases molar Br/Cl by a factor of ~6.5 in residual brines [36].In open basins, Cl washes into ground waters, progressively removing Cl but leaving Br, all the while increasing residual Br/Cl [36,37].Bromine enriched sediments develop by this cyclical process.At Earth's surface, bromine is significantly rarer than chlorine.The upper continental crust has molar Br/Cl ~0.0019 [38], and seawater has molar Br/Cl ~0.0015 [36].Hydrothermal solutions have Br/Cl ~1:10,000 [39].The relative insolubilities of bromides compared to those of chlorides promote bromide mineral formation.For instance, K sp values for PbBr 2 and PbCl 2 are 6.6 × 10 −6 and 1.59 × 10 −5 , respectively.Greater insolubility for eddavidite than for murdochite would favor eddavidite deposition from fluids with [Cl] > [Br].Eddavidite formation arises from both the hydrological process concentrating Br in trapped paleo-seawater and its presumed relative insolubility compared to murdochite.

Bromine-Bearing Minerals
The IMA mineral list currently has 15 species with Br in their formulae, 11 of which contain essential Br (Table 6).Three species with essential Br occur at Bisbee: eddavidite, bromargyrite, and barlowite; all of these have more common Cl analogs: murdochite, chlorargyrite, and claringbullite.All six of these species occur at Bisbee and together they constitute three pairs of chloride-bromide mineral analogs.
Figure 2. SEM imagery of mixed eddavidite-murdochite crystals.(left) Simple cubic crystals.This sample has a maximum molar Br/(Br + Cl) = 0.64 (TableS1).Locality: Southwest mine, Bisbee, Cochise County, Arizona, U.S.A. Sample: RRUFF R050381 (co-type).(right) Octahedral crystal with minor cubic modifications.This sample has a maximum molar Br/(Br + Cl) = 0.52 (TableS1).Locality: Ojuela mine, Mapimí, Durango, Mexico.Sample: NHMLAC 38450.The mineral name eddavidite honors Dr. Edward Emil "Ed" David (1925-2017).Dr. David sought to make science more relevant and accessible to the public; he received much recognition in the scientific, technical, and professional communities.Dr. David worked at Bell Labs from 1950 to 1970, eventually rising to Executive Director of Communications Systems Research.U.S. President Nixon tapped Dr. David to serve as National Science Advisor from 1970 to 1973.He also sat on NASA's Advisory Council and served as the U.S. Representative to the NATO Science Committee [12].In 1973, Dr. David went to work in the private sector, later becoming President of Exxon Research Corporation in 1977, from which he retired in 1986.Dr.David became interested in mineral collecting at the age of six when his uncle "Bibby" presented him with a wooden box of mineral specimens.That gift ignited a lifelong passion in Dr. David, who later built a fine mineral collection, the "core" of which went to the Houston Museum of Natural Science in 1995[13].Unflinchingly, Dr. David started assembling another mineral collection.Dr. David donated 36 fine copper specimens in 2014 and arranged a posthumous gift of his remaining ~450 specimens to the University of Arizona Mineral Museum, the predecessor of the University of Arizona Alfie Norville Gem & Mineral Museum (ANGMM).Dr. David served on the University of Arizona Mineral Museum advisory board from 2007 to 2017, and the ANGMM currently features a gallery of his former specimens.

Figure 8 .
Figure 8.The Cu12O24 metal-oxide cluster in eddavidite and murdochite.(a) Polyhedral view comprising 12 square planar CuO4 units sharing vertices to build a rhombicuboctahedron; a single yellow halogen is enclosed.(b) Space filling view with red O, green Cu, and yellow halogen.Both renderings have the same scale, viewed along [332].

Figure 8 .
Figure 8.The Cu12O24 metal-oxide cluster in eddavidite and murdochite.(a) Polyhedral view comprising 12 square planar CuO4 units sharing vertices to build a rhombicuboctahedron; a single yellow halogen is enclosed.(b) Space filling view with red O, green Cu, and yellow halogen.Both renderings have the same scale, viewed along [332].

Figure 8 . 15 Figure 9 .
Figure 8.The Cu 12 O 24 metal-oxide cluster in eddavidite and murdochite.(a) Polyhedral view comprising 12 square planar CuO 4 units sharing vertices to build a rhombicuboctahedron; a single yellow halogen is enclosed.(b) Space filling view with red O, green Cu, and yellow halogen.Both renderings have the same scale, viewed along [332].Minerals 2024, 14, x FOR PEER REVIEW 11 of 15

4 . Discussion 4 . 1 .
Origin of Eddavidite This study reports eddavidite from two separate mining areas: Bisbee, Arizona, U.S.A., and Mapimí, Durango, Mexico.Both mining areas exploit large carbonate replacement systems, with Bisbee relatively richer in Cu than Pb-Zn-Ag [18,19], whereas Mapimí is richer in Pb-Zn-Ag than Cu [21-23].Despite their overland separation of ~850 km, Bisbee and Mapimí share a significant chapter of geological history.Between 105 and 85

Figure 9 .
Figure 9. Slab of the eddavidite-murdochite crystal structure tilted 5 • off [001].(a) A "house of cards" of square planar CuO 4 units share vertices to build a framework of ideal composition Cu 3 O 4 .(b) Blue Pb and yellow halogen atoms decorate the Cu 3 O 4 framework.The identity of the halogen, Br in eddavidite vs. Cl in murdochite, is the singular distinction between the two species.

Table 1 .
Chemistry of co-type eddavidite-murdochite used for crystal structure refinement.The empirical formula is Cu 12 (Pb 1.92 Fe 0.06 Si 0.06 )(O 15.08 F 0.02 )(Br 0.99 Cl 0.89 calculated on the basis of 12 Cu apfu (Tables

Table 2 .
X-ray diffraction data (d in Å) for type eddavidite, compared with those of murdochite [3 The X-ray diffraction profiles of eddavidite and murdochite are nearly indistinguishable.

Table 4 .
Atomic positions and site occupancies (fixed for refinement) for eddavidite.

Table 5 .
Isotropic equivalent and anisotropic displacement parameters for eddavidite.

Table 2 .
X-ray diffraction data (d in Å) for type eddavidite, compared The X-ray diffraction profiles of eddavidite and murdochite are nearly

Table 6 .
Current listing of IMA approved mineral species with Br in their formulae, those with essential Br are listed in bold.