Arsenopyrite is a sulfosalts / arsenide mineral recognized among collectors for its crystal form and distribution, with several world-class Chinese localities.
Computed from simplified end-member formula. Solid-solution series, water content, and trace substitutions cause real-world variation.
IMA Abbreviation (Whitney-Evans 2010)
Apy
→ Arsenopyrite
Fe-As sulfide
Standard symbol from American Mineralogist (Whitney & Evans, 2010). Used in thin-section labeling, phase diagrams, and IMA-style species records.
⚠ Safety & Handling
☠toxicmoderate
Iron arsenic sulfide — As releases via abrasion.
Handling: Wash hands. No grinding.
Information provided in good faith. Consult local hazmat regulations for transport and disposal. Severely hazardous specimens may require special storage cabinets.
Luster
metallic
Tin-white to steel-gray.
Magnetism
Category:
diamagnetic
Test result:
No response
FeAsS; diamagnetic despite Fe.
Test with rare-earth magnet (N42 or N52 neodymium). Suspend specimen on thread for sensitive paramagnetic detection. Diamagnetic minerals are weakly repelled (visible only with strong magnets like bismuth).
Streak Test
dark gray-black
Tin-white metallic; same streak as pyrrhotite.
Streak = color of the powdered mineral. Drag specimen across unglazed white porcelain plate (Mohs 6.5). For minerals harder than the plate, crush a small flake into powder and observe color.
🪨
Collector tier: Solid Display
Reliable mid-tier display species. Easy to find in well-formed examples; broad locality diversity.
Mohs5.5-6
Vickers (~)820 HV
Knoop (~)870 HK
Nickel–Strunz2.EB.20
Dana02.12.04.01
Element composition by mass
Formula: FeAsS · molar mass: 162.83 g/mol
As
46.01%
Fe
34.3%
S
19.69%
Computed from atomic weights (IUPAC 2021). Site-occupancy groups (Fe,Mn) split equally.
Arsenopyrite sits at 5.5-6 on the Mohs scale —
just hard enough to scratch glass.
Colors:
Streak Black
Crystal system Monoclinic
Pronunciation/ˌɑːrsɛnoʊˈpaɪraɪt/
Sulfides & SulfosaltsSulfides – Sulfarsenides
TL;DR · 1 min read
Arsenopyrite is the principal ore of arsenic and one of the great supporting species of the Hunan tungsten-fluorite belt. Sharp silvery prisms – needle-thin or stout, single or in radiating sprays – frequently appear with Yaogangxian fluorite and Xianghualing wolframite.
Arsenopyrite is the principal ore of arsenic and one of the great supporting species of the Hunan tungsten-fluorite belt. Sharp silvery prisms – needle-thin or stout, single or in radiating sprays – frequently appear with Yaogangxian fluorite and Xianghualing wolframite.
The Chinese Angle
Yaogangxian and Xianghualing in Hunan produce sharp arsenopyrite prisms (often 2-8 cm) on milky quartz, frequently in combination with green fluorite cubes. Specimen-grade material from these districts is the international reference for the species.
Cite this entry
APA
MyMineralBox Editorial Team. (2026). Arsenopyrite. My Mineral Box. Retrieved May 23, 2026, from https://mymineralbox.com/mineral-encyclopedia/minerals/arsenopyrite/
MLA
MyMineralBox Editorial Team. "Arsenopyrite." My Mineral Box, 2026, https://mymineralbox.com/mineral-encyclopedia/minerals/arsenopyrite/. Accessed May 23, 2026.
Chicago
MyMineralBox Editorial Team. "Arsenopyrite." My Mineral Box. Last modified May 4, 2026. https://mymineralbox.com/mineral-encyclopedia/minerals/arsenopyrite/.
BibTeX
@misc{mmb_arsenopyrite,
author = {{MyMineralBox Editorial Team}},
title = {{Arsenopyrite}},
year = {2026},
publisher = {My Mineral Box},
url = {https://mymineralbox.com/mineral-encyclopedia/minerals/arsenopyrite/},
urldate = {2026-05-23}
}
About Arsenopyrite
Arsenopyrite belongs to the sulfosalts / arsenide class in the arsenopyrite group and has the chemical formula FeAsS. It crystallizes in the monoclinic system and has a distinctive metallic presence in any collection. Its combination of structural character and global distribution make it a recognized species in both systematic and aesthetic collections.
Identification & care
Specimens usually show flat tabular to blocky, sometimes pseudo-octahedral ('lozenge') or rhombic cross-section; prismatic; also massive. Its color is typically silver-white to steel-gray, may have slight yellow tint and tarnished material often iridescent. The luster is metallic, sub-metallic, the streak is gray-black, and specimens are typically opaque. The cleavage is distinct/good on {001}; traces on {010}. The fracture is irregular/uneven, which aids identification.
Collector context
How it forms
The geological setting for Arsenopyrite is typically mesothermal gold-silver-arsenic hydrothermal veins; high-temperature sulfide ore deposits; metamorphic rocks associated with gold; often the most abundant arsenic mineral. It is commonly found in association with gold (microscopic inclusions — arsenopyrite is major gold host), pyrite, galena, sphalerite, chalcopyrite, löllingite.
Classic Chinese localities
Yaogangxian W-Sn ore field is a benchmark source for arsenopyrite. Huanggang Fe-Sn deposit is an important Chinese source for the species.
Why collectors care
Arsenopyrite is a frequently-sought species in serious collections because its habit is recognizable, its color often strong, and its best examples unmistakable even at a distance. Chinese material has driven much of the recent visual shift in the species — sharper crystals, deeper colors, cleaner matrix.
What affects value
Value in Arsenopyrite is assessed, in typical order of weight, against: (1) locality provenance; (2) size relative to the species norm; (3) crystal form and termination sharpness; (4) color saturation and zoning; (5) transparency and internal clarity; (6) matrix quality and aesthetic balance; (7) condition (absence of damage, chips, or repair). Cleaning quality and verified locality documentation act as multipliers across the above.
Naming history
The name Arsenopyrite has a specific etymological and historical context — see Mindat's reference entry for provenance details. We have retained naming data at the record level; published prose is paraphrased from factual fields rather than copied from source.
Frequently asked questions
What is Arsenopyrite?
Arsenopyrite is a sulfosalts / arsenide mineral recognized among collectors for its crystal form and distribution, with several world-class Chinese localities.
What is the chemical formula of Arsenopyrite?
The chemical formula of Arsenopyrite is FeAsS.
What crystal system does Arsenopyrite belong to?
Arsenopyrite crystallises in the Monoclinic crystal system.
Where is Arsenopyrite found?
Notable localities for Arsenopyrite include Gejiu Mine, Huanggang Mine, Panasqueira.
Mindat.org is the world’s largest open mineralogy database. Our descriptions are written independently and fact-checked.
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