Hendricksite is a member of the trioctahedral micas group. The mineral was named by Clifford Frondel and Jun Ito in honor of Sterling Brown Hendricks, who studied micas. It was approved in 1966 by the IMA.
{{Infobox mineral | boxtextcolor = black | boxbgcolor = #7e5b3d | name = Hendricksite | category = Phyllosilicate minerals | group = Mica group, trioctahedral mica group | formula = KZn3(Si3Al)O10(OH)2 | IMAsymbol = Hds | strunz = 09.EC.20 | system = Monoclinic | dana = 71.2.2b.6 | class = Prismatic (2/m) | symmetry = B2/m | unit cell = 499.58 | molweight = 493.25 | color = Copper-, bronze brown, dark reddish brown to reddish black | cleavage = Perfect on {001} | mohs = 2.5 – 3 | opticalprop = Biaxial (−) | refractive = nα = 1.598 – 1.624 nβ = 1.658 – 1.686 nγ = 1.660 – 1.697 | birefringence = 0.062 – 0.073 | pleochroism = X = Pale yellow, Y = Z = Light chestnut brown | 2V = Measured: 2°- 8° Calculated: 20°- 44° | dispersion = Slight r 1, and 3A. Hendricksite can be included in a solid solution series with zincohendricksite and manganoanhendricksite being the endmembers, a solid solution series meaning the three sharing a general formula but having a substitution of elements in at least one of the atomic sites. A part of the solid solutions series might be magnesium bearing hendricksite, the series perhaps being complete to phlogopite and partially to biotite. In the case of trioctahedral micas, the ellipsoids of the cationic sites have an uniaxial positive optical property, elongated to c. However, in hendricksite's case this is only typical for the two zinc-free sides. In the octahedras containing zinc, the ellipsoids are uniaxial negative and flattened to a.
== Occurrences and localities == It can appear only in metamorphosed stratiform zinc deposits, in irregular lens or sheet like skarn bodies. It can be found in the Franklin mine in New Jersey, US. The mineral can be found at the Sterling hill as well, although it is much rarer due to the higher iron and magnesium concentrations. It occurs with vesuvianite, bustamite and feldspars, additional associated minerals being minerals of the axinite group, calcite, rhodonite, willemite, hancockite, as well as andrasite.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).