Phosphate Rocks

Apatite is the most abundant phosphate mineral which include more than 95% of al phosphorus in the Earth ́s crust. The seventh chapter of this book provides brief description of sedimentary and igneous phosphate rocks and introduces basic ideas for characterization and classification of phosphate rocks. The chapter continues with description of biogenic apatites, description of phosphate rocks deposits and introdu‐ ces other sources of phosphorus. Furthermore, geological role of apatite, cycle of phosphorus, weathering of apatite, fission track analysis and extraterrestrial apatites were described. The last section is dedicated to structure and properties important of non-apatitic phosphate minerals, such as atuanite, crandallite, lazulite, millisite, monazite, tobernite, xenotime etc.

line CO 2 -rich fluorapatite (francolite) and cryptocrystalline collophane. The igneous deposits comprise fluorapatite ores, which mostly accommodate carbonatites and other types of alkaline intrusions. The magmatic ores are generally of lower grade but give higher-quality beneficiation products with low contents of unwanted contaminants (Cd, Pb, As, U, Th, Mg and Al) [11], [12].
The beneficiation products of apatite ores as a commodity are traded as phosphate rock. It is the only significant global resource of phosphorus used dominantly in the manufacturing of nitrogen-phosphorus-potassium (NPK) fertilizers for food-crop nutrition and in the production of animal feed supplements. Only 10 -15% of the world's production of phosphate rock has other applications (e.g. pharmaceuticals, ceramics, textiles and explosives) and represents an important alternative source of rare-earth elements (REE) [12], [13]. The REE contents in apatites are useful in paleoceanographic studies to identify the seawater masses and circulation patterns or to quantify the redox state of the ocean [14].
The composition of phosphate rocks varies from one deposit to another. Therefore, phosphate rocks from different sources may be expected to behave differently in beneficiation and acidulation processes. Phosphate rocks are primarily composed of the apatite group in association with a wide assortment of accessory minerals, mainly fluorides, carbonates, clays, quartz, silicates and metal oxides [13], [15], [16].
Si, Ca, Fe and Al are the most common companion elements in phosphate rocks, with the median abundances of 53.3 wt.%, 30.0 wt.%, 13.6 wt.% and 8.0 wt.%, respectively, compared  [17]. ical systems, the phosphate content is the limiting factor for growth. Nearly all igneous rocks contain some phosphate, even if it is only ~0.1% (0.2% P 2 O 5 on average in lithosphere), with nearly all of it in the form of apatite. Sedimentary rocks generally contain rather less (~0.1% P 2 O 5 on average). Sedimentary phosphorite is believed to originate from widely dispersed apatite mainly in igneous rocks [25].

Sedimentary phosphate rocks
Most marine sediments and rocks contain less than 0.3% of P 2 O 5 . However, periodically through geological time, phosphorites (with the content of P 2 O 5 of 5% or greater) formed on the seafloor in response to specialized oceanic conditions and accumulated in sufficient concentrations to produce major deposits of regional extent 4 [26].
Marine phosphate formation and deposition represent the periods of low rates of sedimentation in combination with large supplies of nutrients. Phosphorus is then concentrated by various mechanisms, possibly bacterial (refer to discussion of Fig. 7), at either the sedimentwater interface or within interstitial pore waters. This process leads to primary formation and growth of phosphate grains, which remain where they were formed or are transported as clastic particles within the environment of formation. During subsequent periods of time, some primary phosphate grains may be physically reworked into another sediment unit in response to either changing or different environmental processes [26].  [20].
The stratigraphic distribution 5 [29] of phosphorites [28] is shown in Fig. 3(a). The major discoveries in Proterozoic and Cambrian rocks were not made until late 1930s, initially in the USSR (Kazakhstan), Poland, Korea, China and northern Vietnam. Early discoveries were made in the course of regional geological mapping and exploration for metal deposits, but later deposits were found mainly using more direct exploration techniques. It is possible that the greatest global phosphogenic episode in geological history took place in Late Proterozoic and Cambrian. While pelletal phosphorites are common in most Cambrian deposits, the Proterozoic age phosphorites contain mudstone ( Fig. 3(b), microphosphorite) and stromatolitic phosphorite 6 [28], [30].
Some phosphates were formed during all major sea-level transgressions during 67 million years of Cenozoic history; however, some periods were more important than others with respect to producing large volumes of phosphorites and preserving them in the geologic column. During the Paleocene and Eocene, several major episodes of phosphogenesis occurred within the major episodes of phosphogenesis in the major east-west ocean, which included Tethys [31], 7 producing extensive amounts of phosphorites throughout the Middle East, Mediterranean and northern South American regions. By the Neogene, this circum-global ocean had been destroyed by the plate tectonic processes, and the north-south Pacific and 5 Since the Earth is stratified, in a broad sense, all rocks and classes of rocks (sedimentary, igneous and metamorphic) fall within the scope of stratigraphy and stratigraphic classification. Rocks can be classified according to lithology, fossil content, magnetic polarity, electrical properties, seismic response, chemical or mineralogical composition, etc. Rocks can be also classified according to time of their origin or environment of genesis. Rock bodies can be classified into many different categories of stratigraphic classification, including lithostratigraphic units (1), biostratigraphic units (2), chronostratigraphic units (3), unconformity-bounded units (4) and magnetostratigraphic units (5). Please see work [29] for further details. 6 Phosphate occurs as concentrated in stromatolite columns, laminar algal (stromatolitic) phosphorite, reworked fragments of stromatolites forming silicified conglomeratic or brecciated phosphorite, massive-bedded phosphorite with sandy and clayey laminate and disseminate pellets and nodules in dolomite [30]. 7 The Tethys Ocean divided the continental masses into northern and southern groups. It merged at both ends with the Panthalassa or proto-Pacific Ocean. The remnants of Tethys are now located within Alpine mountain belts from the Caribbean in the west to recent collision zone between Australia and Eurasia in the east and within still-growing Central Atlantic Ocean between Africa and North America [31].
Atlantic oceans dominated global circulation patterns. Upper Cenozoic phosphogenesis ( Table 1) occurred along the north-south ocean-ways, which now contain modern continental margins. On the basis of the extent of known phosphate deposits, the Miocene was by far the most important episode of phosphate formation in Upper Cenozoic [26].  [34], [35], [36]. Phosphorites on the sea floor occur in two types of environments on [37]:

i.
Continental margins in association with terrigenous; ii.
Submerged mountains in association with calcareous and volcanogenic rocks.
Phosphorites consist mainly of phosphate cement enveloping small grains of phosphatic and non-phosphatic materials. Phosphate in the cavities of foraminifera is purer than that enveloping the grains [37].
The largest phosphorite-bearing regions are situated along the west coasts of Africa and America, at the east coast of the USA, off New Zealand and in the central part of the northern Pacific. The phosphatic matter of phosphorites consists of carbonate-fluorapatite and is intermixed with variable amounts of terrigenous, biogenic and diagenetic non-phosphatic components, which are the cause of a wide range of fluctuations in their chemical compositions. The age of sea-floor phosphorites varies from Cretaceous to Recent. Recent phosphorites are localized in the south west of Africa and at Peru-Chile shelves, which are the areas influenced by strong upwelling of nutrient-rich waters ( Fig. 4(a)), resulting in high biological productivity, intensive biogenic sedimentation and diagenetic redistribution of geochemically active, mobile, organic-derived phosphorus in sediments. This phosphorus is accreted in the form of initially soft and friable nodules undergoing gradual lithification [27], [37].
Pronounced climatic, biological and geologic effects accompany upwelling, especially where it is produced by the divergence in coastal areas ( Fig. 4(b)). The presence of cold waters along the coasts produces the coastal fogs and humid-air deserts, such as those of northern Chile and southwest Africa. The nutrient-rich waters that lie alongside these deserts are the lushest gardens of the sea, as the upwelling cold waters there support tremendous quantities of organisms. Most of large accumulations of guano (Section 7.2.2) are formed by the seafowl colonies feeding in these waters, and it is the extremely dry climate created by upwelling that makes the preservation of guano possible [27].
Sedimentary deposits usually contain varieties of carbonate-fluorapatite called francolite (described in Section 2.6). Francolite is defined as apatite that contains significant amount of  [27].
Phosphate Rocks http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62214 CO 2 with less than 1% of fluorine. Apatite associated with igneous source rocks may be of primary magmatic, hydrothermal or secondary origin. Primary apatite from igneous sources may be of fluorapatite, hydroxylapatite or chlorapatite varieties. Pure apatites from igneous deposits contain slightly over 42% of P 2 O 5 [23].
Since a wide range of very different particles and processes of formation complicates the simple classification of phosphorites, there is not any unified phosphorite classification 8 [18], [36], [38]. The proposed classification schemes for phosphorites describe their constituent particles, such as pelletal phosphorite. Nonetheless, the descriptor pelletal indicates nothing more than rounded phosphate particles of any origin. A widely recognized distinction in phosphorites is based on the grain size and holds specifically among phosphorites where the phosphate particles are of sand-or coarse silt-size and those that are of clay-and fine silt-size [28]. The phosphorites can be classified as follows [37]: 1. Non-conglomeratic (also termed as nodular) phosphorites: consist of phosphatized limestones and gluconate-quartz sandstones. Two varieties of nodular phosphorites can be recognized: a. Ferruginized with glazed surface. The cement of ferruginized phosphorites is much richer in finely dispersed goethite than that of non-ferruginized phosphorites. Furthermore, ferruginized phosphorites do not contain the fragments of macrofauna.
b. Non-ferruginized with rough surface. In non-ferruginized phosphorites, the cement is micrite-collophane and its color varies form yellow (collophane, described in Section 2.6) to gray (micrite 9 [19]). The chambers of foraminifera are filled with phosphate-carbonate cement, less often with glauconite or goethite (FeO(OH) [33]). Some nodules of phosphatized limestone are coated with a discontinuous layer of secondary phosphate with the thickness up to 1 cm.

2.
Conglomeratic phosphorites consist of pebbles of phosphatized limestone (up to 50% of the rock) held together by the cement similar in composition to the phosphatized glauconite-quartz sandstones described above. In many samples of this type, two or three conglomerate layers are clearly visible, differing in size of pebbles and in content of glauconite. The bedding planes separating the layers with denser or less dense packing of grains are also distinguished in the cement. The surface of these planes is glazed and brown due to higher content of iron hydroxides and organic matter. Upon impact, the rock breaks along the planes. In addition, irregular microerosion surfaces are observed in 8 The nature and origin of phosphorites have been a matter of much speculation since they were first discovered more than 150 years ago [38], and there is not any commonly accepted nomenclature [39]. 9 Micrite (the abbreviation for microcrystalline calcite) is characterized by crypto-to microcrystalline crystal texture. As the synonym of micrite, the names as lime mud, lime ooze, lime mudstone, calcimudstone and calcilutite are also used. The original definition sets a grain-size limit to < 4 μm, but current terminology distinguishes between minimicrite (<1 μm), micrite I (1 -4 μm) and micrite II (4 -30 μm). Furthermore, primary micrites (orthomicrites and nannoagorites), secondary micrites and pseudomicrites are recognized. Orthomicrites consist of subhedral polygonal calcite grains meeting at the interfaces. Nannoagorites are composed of calcareous pelagic biota. Secondary and pseudo micrites result from the diagenetic processes [19]. the conglomeratic phosphorites, which run across the grains of glauconite, shells and bedding planes [33]. Although the types are named on the structural basis, the phosphate grains do not always have the dimensions given above. At the same time, the classified types fairly differ in many features, such as the association with various geological formations, the phosphate mineralogy and the stratigraphic sequence, thus being of lithologic character [40].
Most attempts to classify the phosphorite rocks adopt and modify the classification scheme for carbonates [36]. In 1962, DUNHAM [41] published the classification scheme for limestone.
This scheme for carbonate rocks was modified for non-genetic classification of phosphorites ( Fig. 5) [28].  The macroscopic classification scheme for phosphate sediments suggested by RIGGS [42] is shown in Fig. 6(a). The ancient deposits are better characterized via the scheme in Fig. 6(b), which was proposed by KASTERN and GARRISON [43]. In this model, three types of phosphates were recognized [39], [43]:

i.
F-phosphates are friable, light-colored micronodules and peloids of carbonatefluorapatite (CFAP); they were formed by the precipitation of CFAP in laminated diatom muds deposited within the oxygen-minimum zone.

ii.
Phosphatic sands, termed as P-phosphates, consist of phosphatic peloids, coated grains and fish debris, often having an admixture of fine siliciclastic grains. These sands occur in thin layers and burrowed beds up to 2 m thick.

iii.
Dark and dense phosphates, herein called D-phosphates, are the most abundant.
They occur as nodules, gravels and hard grounds. These phosphates were formed through complicated cycles of CFAP precipitation during early diagenesis, erosion and exhumation and reburial and rephosphatization processes associated with changing energy conditions, which may reflect the effects of changes in the sea level.
CFAP cements in P-and D-phosphates are often replaced microbial structures, but our data do not reveal whether this microbial involvement was passive or active. F-phosphates are most common in deeper water, outer-shelf/upper-slope sites, whereas D-and P-phosphates tend to predominate at shallower shelf sites more subjected to episodic high-energy conditions, especially during the low stands of sea level. This concept reveals the paleoenvironmental and time relationships of various phosphate sediments [39], [43]. c. Generating or maintaining the pH and redox conditions, which favor the precipitation of phosphate.
The models of authigenic phosphorite genesis (Fig. 7) assume the occurrence of mineralization of organic phosphorus in biologically productive waters, such as at ocean margins, that is, at shallow depths on continental slopes, shelf areas or plateaus [44].
Here, detrital accumulations may be mineralized at the sediment-water interface and in interstitial pore waters, liberating phosphate, some of which may then interact chemically with calcium in seawater to form phosphorite grains. These grains may be subsequently redistributed within the sediments units. The dissolution of fish debris (bones) is also considered an important source of phosphate in authigenic phosphorite genesis. The upwelling probably also plays an important role in many cases of authigenic formation of phosphorite. During non-upwelling period in winter, the phosphate-sequestering bacteria of oxidative genera Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter become dominant in the water column. Fermentative Vibrios and Enterobacteriaceae are dominant during upwelling in summer. It was suggested that Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter, which sequester phosphate as polyphosphate under aerobic conditions and hydrolyze polyphosphate under anaerobic conditions to obtain the energy of maintenance and to sequester volatile fatty acid from polyhydroxybutyrate formation, Fig. 7. The schematic presentation of formation of phosphorite in marine environment [44].
contribute to the phosphorite formation. Locally elevated, excreted orthophosphate becomes available for the precipitation as phosphorite by reacting with seawater calcium [44].
Authigenic phosphorite formation at some eastern continental margins, where upwelling, if occurred at all, was a weak and intermittent process that may have been formed more directly as a result of intracellular bacterial phosphate accumulation, which became transformed into carbonate-fluorapatite upon the death of cells accumulated in sediments in areas where the sedimentation rate was very low [44].
The model of diagenetic formation of phosphorite generally assumes the exchange of phosphate for carbonate in accretions that have the form of calcite and aragonite. The role of bacteria in this process is to mobilize phosphate by mineralizing detrital organic matter. The demonstration of this process in marine and freshwater environment under laboratory conditions leads to the hypothesis that the diagenesis of calcite to form apatite explains the origin of some deposits in the North Atlantic. The phosphorite deposits of Baja California and in the core of eastern Pacific Ocean seem to have formed as a result of partial diagenesis [44].

Igneous rocks
Apatites of igneous origin include hydrothermal veins and disseminated replacements, marginal differentiations near the boundaries of intrusions and pegmatites, but the largest deposits are intrusive masses or sheets associated with carbonatite, nepheline-syenite and other alkalic rocks [27]. Igneous rocks are classified on the basis of their [21], [45]: 1. Color index: means the volume percentage of dark-colored mineral and divides the rocks to leucocratic (color index varies from 0 to 30%), mesocratic (from 30 to 60%) and melanocratic (from 60 to 100%).

Texture
: coarse-grained rocks, which crystallize at depth, are termed as plutonic rocks (as the rate of crystallization is slow, such rocks are holocrystalline 10 ). Fine-grained rocks containing minerals embedded in glassy matrix 11 (often devitrified) are named as volcanic or effusive rocks. The crystallization of volcanic rocks takes place on the surface and is associated with rapid cooling and loss of volatile constituents of the lava. Their texture is therefore vesicular [46] 12 (vesicle-rich) and hypocrystalline. 13 Rocks that crystallize partly at depth and partly near the surface are called hypabyssal 14 (subvolcanic). The term porphyry is also related to hypabyssal rocks, which are characterized by one or more than one minerals present as phenocrysts in fine-grained groundmass. 10 The name for fully (100%) crystallized igneous rock [45]. 11 The matrix is defined as interstitial material between larger (skeletal) grains [46]. 12 The texture is characterized by many cavities (vesicles), which were formed by bubbles of volatile gasses during the decrease of pressure at extrusion of magma to the surface. Lava solidifies before bubbles of gases can escape to the atmosphere [46]. 13 The name for igneous rocks where the ratio of crystals to glassy phase is higher than 3:5. Rocks containing higher amount of glass are termed as hypohyaline or holohyaline [45].

Chemistry and mineralogy:
the rocks comprising more than 90 vol.% of ferromagnesian minerals, such as olivine, pyroxene, amphibole and biotite, are called ultramafic (ultrabasic) rocks. The rocks composed from essentially one or more ferromagnesian minerals are termed as mafic 15 (basic) rocks. In mafelsic rocks, the mafic and felsic minerals are present in approximately equal amounts. Felsic rocks 16 contain predominantly light-colored minerals, such as quartz, feldspar, feldspathoid and muscovite.
An acidic rock contains > 60% SiO 2 , whereas a basic rock is characterized by silica content ranging from 44 to 52% of SiO 2 . Many of ultramafic rocks are ultrabasic with the content of silica < 44%, but such ultramafic rocks as pyroxenites and amphibolites are not ultrabasic, but they are rather basic [21].
Igneous rocks are formed by the solidification of silicate melt from high temperatures. Since the sequence of crystallization follows the liquidus-solidus phase relationships, the minerals of low content will normally crystallize the least, but diorite and granodiorite melts may have enough phosphorus present for the FAP phase field to intersect the liquidus and to allow early formation of fluorapatite. Later-crystallizing phases should form in the interstices between early-crystallizing phases of alkali-rich igneous rocks and should form an immiscible phosphate-rich liquid phase, which leads to large late-stage segregations of FAP, some of which are associated with magnetite [47].
Where the content of phosphorus is very low, phosphorus may remain in the fluid phase, and apatite will form during the time at which the rock re-reacts with this fluid. This reaction is termed as pneumatolitic, and formed crystals will be small and often euhedral (with crystal facets). They may be included inside preexisting mineral grains. This situation is often encountered in granites and other related siliceous igneous rocks. The concentration of apatite minerals in igneous rocks is rarely sufficient to yield the source for mining the deposits for the phosphorus content [47].

Biogenic apatites
The biogenic (endogenous) mineral deposits form in surface environments as the transformation of primary organic aggregates or as a result of biochemical processes. Since the organism produces many of the same substances that form inorganically in rocks, the biogenic minerals are not minerals in the conventional sense 1 . Biogenic minerals originate from living organisms or with their assistance ( Table 2). These compounds are crystallized within living organisms as a result of cell activity and are surrounded by organic matter. Classical examples are the bones of vertebrates. The bones and teeth consist of fine fibers or platy crystals (Section 10.9.2) of a mineral closely related to carbonate-hydroxylapatite (Section 4.6). These crystals are suspended in organic collagen. The crystals of apatite, which often do not exceed 10 nm in length, comprise up to 70% of weight of dried bone. The proteins make up the remaining 30% [48]. Fe-hydroxides Shells of diatoms, pediculates of Protozoa Table 2. Mineralogical composition of solid plant and animal tissues [48].
In addition to the occurrence within the bones and teeth of vertebrates, mineral-organic aggregates are also found in mollusk shells, solid tissues of foraminifera corals, trilobites and other arthropods, echinoderms, some algae, etc. Some other biogenic processes involve bacteria. Large deposits of native sulfur, manganese oxides and hydroxides and iron are attributed to bacterial activity. Bacterial activity is also involved in the weathering processes of sulfide oxidation and transformation of kaolinite into bauxites [48].
Biogenic apatite is one of the most promising authigenic phases in this respect, as it is present in most siliciclastic deposits and is strongly enriched in a large suite of trace elements.
Biogenic (fish teeth and bones) and diagenetic apatites are essential repositories of sedimentary phosphorus. They occasionally form huge deposits, as in West Africa, which are actively mined to provide agricultural fertilizers. Some of these deposits, found in particular in the Late Precambrian of China, after chemical precipitates seem to be associated with the episodes of global glaciation. In low-temperature waters, phosphates form numerous complexes. The concentration of phosphorus in sea and river water is limited by very low solubility of apatite.
Phosphate radicals often attach to the surface of iron oxyhydroxide colloids when they precipitate in estuaries [49].

Genetic classification of phosphate rocks
The genetic classification proposed by EGOROV [50] includes three types of apatite ores according to the mineral assemblages [6], [51], [52], [53], [54], [55]: i. Silicate-apatite (ijolite 17 ): ijolite is a medium-to coarse-grained equigranular rock composed of nephelite and aegirite-augite, or other pyroxene, in nearly equal proportions. There are varieties richer in nephelite, approaching the composition of urtite. 18 Nephelite is an equant anhedrons, pyroxene forms euhedral crystals with zonal structure and margin of more sodic pyroxenes than that in the center, which is commonly titaniferous. Some varieties contain titaniferous melanite and iivaarite. Apatite is a prominent constituent and titanate is generally present in small amounts. ii.

iii.
Carbonate-apatite (carbonatite): the crystalline products of low-volume and hightemperature carbonate melts that have been evolving from the upper mantle ( Fig. 8) for at least the past 2 Ga. Many are associated with crustal complexes of alkali-rich silicate rocks from which they may have evolved by liquid immiscibility. The endogenous apatite deposits can be classified 20 into the following types [60], [61]: 1. Crystallized and concentrated in the late magmatic stage, which can be further divided to (a) apatite-magnetite deposits (e.g. Kiruna deposit in Sweden) and (b) nephelineapatite (e.g. Khibiny in Kola Peninsula in Russia).

Phosphate rock deposits
In general, phosphate rock reserves are non-metallic ores 21 that can be economically produced at the present time using existing technology. Phosphate rock resources include reserves and any other materials of interest that are not reserves. A reserve base is a portion of the resource from which future reserves may be developed. The classification applying to phosphate rocks include [23].
• Resource is defined as a concentration of naturally occurring phosphate material in such a form or amount for which the economic extraction of a product is currently or potentially feasible. The resources are divided into many categories depending on the amount of pertinent information available to define the amount of material potentially available and if it is economic, marginally economic or sub-economic to exploit these resources.
• Reserve base is the part of an identified resource that meets the minimum criteria related to current mining and production practices including grade, quality, thickness and depth.
• Reserves are the part of the reserve base that can be economically extracted or produced at the time of the determination. They may be termed as marginal, inferred or inferred marginal reserves. This does not signify that the extraction facilities are in place or functional.
• The grades of apatite deposits from the economic point of view are introduced in Table 3.
The locations of the world's phosphate deposits are shown in Fig. 9 and the average content of P 2 O 5 is listed in Table 4.
The most known Miocene phosphate deposits (  Table 3. Grades of apatite deposits [25]. 21 Ores of economic value can be classified as metallic or non-metallic according to the use of the mineral. Certain minerals may be mined and processed for more than one purpose. In one category, the mineral may be metal and non-metallic ore, e.g. bauxite used for the production of aluminum and ceramics, respectively [62]. Fig. 9. The overview of the world's phosphate deposits (a) [20] and the location of the major phosphate rock-producing areas of some known deposits (b) [26], [63].
Locally, these Miocene sediments are exposed on the seafloor; however, generally, they are buried below thin covers of Plio-Pleistocene and Holocene surface sediments. Thus, there is high potential for discovering new phosphate deposits within the Miocene sediments on the world's continental shelves, because [26]: a. Phosphate genesis is known to occur throughout the shelf in upper slope environments.
b. Thicker and more extensive sequences of Miocene sediments occur on the shelves than on adjacent coastal plains.
c. The shallow subsurface Neogene geology of most of the world's shelves is poorly known. i.
The distribution of phosphate in surface sediments closely reflects the distribution within underlying Miocene sediments units.

ii.
The process of reworking significantly dilutes the concentration of phosphate in the surficial sediments. These relationships were also recognized on the shelves of northwest and southwest Africa and could represent important exploration tools for richer Tertiary 22 phosphorites occurring within the shallow subsurface on many continental shelves in the world [26].
The deposits of apatite of igneous origin occur as intrusive masses or sheets, as hydrothermal veins or disseminated replacements, as marginal differentiations along or near the boundaries of intrusions or as pegmatites. Intrusive masses are the largest of these deposits. They are commonly associated with alkalic igneous rock complexes, many of which such as those in Africa, Brazil and Sweden are associated with the rift valley structures. Carbonatite, ijolite, nepheline-syenite and pyroxenite are common members of the rock assemblage. Many of these complexes have a ring like structure, with carbonatite as the central core [27].
Phosphate deposits have been discovered within the past 100 years at the rate far greater than the rate of consumption (Fig. 10). Since new phosphate deposits are expected to be discovered in the future, the oil exploration programs have probed most of the coastal sedimentary basins of the world during the past 20 -30 years, and any large-scale discoveries of phosphate rock would probably have occurred in conjunction with these activities [22].

Other sources of phosphorus
Other important commercial sources of phosphorus ( Table 4) include [25]:

i.
Guano [25], [27], [64], [65], [66]: natural deposit (accumulation) formed from decaying bones and excreta from fish-eating birds. 23 Fresh seafowl droppings contain about 22% N and 4% P 2 O 5 . Bat guanos are the most abundant in the cave areas of temperate and tropical regions. Although many bat guano deposits were found and mined, most of them are measured in hundreds or thousands of tons, and only sporadic production is obtained from them now. Seafowl deposits are mainly confined to islands and coastal regions at low latitudes. The largest lie along the west coasts of lower California, South America and Africa and on islands near the equatorial currents.
It was known that bird dung was utilized by the Carthaginians as early as 200 BC in order to improve crop yields. The content of P 2 O 5 in guano can vary in dependence on the age of the deposit, 24 the local climate and the bird kind. Guano deposits are found in Chile, Peru, Mexico, Seychelles, Philippines, the Arabian Gulf and elsewhere, but they account for less than 2% of the world's phosphate production.
Guano is used almost exclusively as fertilizers. The Nauru and Christmas Island phosphorite deposits may be guano in origin, but they are of very limited extent. It 23 It is estimated that marine birds may take out as much as 5.10 10 g of phosphorus from the ocean each year [67]. The Spanish name "guano" has an origin in Quechua word "huanu" (i.e. dung).
Guano is composed of bird droppings, and although birds existed as early as the mid-Mesozoic, their major development did not occur until the Cenozoic era, probably in the Eocene period. It follows that some seamount deposits are too old to have originated from bird droppings [64].
Most of large accumulations of guano are formed on the surface by seafowl, but smaller quantities are formed by bats and to a lesser extent by other cave-dwelling mammals and birds [27].
is believed that rainwater can carry soluble phosphate from guano and trickle over rocks, where phosphate interacts to form phosphatic layers, e.g. phosphatized coral rock. Bird guano, mainly from Peru, achieved the greatest importance in about the middle of the 19th century, shortly before the phosphate rock industry began to establish itself.

ii.
Basic slag [25]: is a minor source of phosphorus. This waste is the product from blast furnaces operating on iron ores with significant content of phosphorus. Basic slag contains tetracalcium phosphate (Ca 3 (PO 4 ) 2 ·CaO) and silicocarnotite (Ca 3 (PO 4 ) 2 ·Ca 2 SiO 4 ), which are applied directly as fertilizers. Recorded world production is mainly from France, Germany and Luxembourg.

iii.
Meat and bone meal (MBM) or bone ash [25], [68]: as an animal byproduct, MBM contains not only substantial amounts of phosphorus in soluble organic form but also calcium and microelements. Ground (bone meal) or calcined and ground (bone ash) bones were recognized as a source of phosphorus at an early date.
Other important commercial sources of phosphorus are casein and lecithin. Casein is obtained from bovine milk. Lecithin was extracted from soy bean oil [25].

Phosphorite weathering derivates
Weathering (Section 7.3.2) leads to the formation of enriched residual and replacing deposits from phosphatic deposits not otherwise minable. The Tennessee "brown rock" phosphate deposits consist of nowadays residuum developed through the decomposition of phosphatic limestones of Ordovician age. The "river pebble" deposits prominent in early history of phosphate mining in Florida and South Carolina are mostly placers formed by alluvial concentration of phosphatic pebbles eroded from the phosphatic formations of adjacent terrain [27].
The Tennessee "white rock" and Florida "hard rock" deposits were formed by the redeposition of phosphate derived from the decomposition of apatite under more advanced weathering. The same decomposition-phosphatization process accounts for the formation of calcium aluminum phosphate and aluminum phosphate in the "leached zone" of the Bone Valley field and deeply weathered Cretaceous and Eocene deposits of west Africa [27].

Geological role of apatite
As was described above, the number of different elements can substitute into the structure of apatite, 25 and this mineral can contain a number of trace elements by the substitution in both anion and cation sites. This means that apatite can be used as an indicator of planetary halogen compositions. The quantitative ion microprobe measurements of apatite from lunar basalts showed that portions of the lunar mantle and/or crust are richer in volatile species than previously thought [4]. 25 The tools based on the isotope composition of apatite were already described in Section 6.5.
Apatite was also used to determine the characteristics of metamorphic fluids within the mantle. For example, O'REILLY and GRIFFIN [69] and DOUCE et al [70] classified apatite within Phanerozoic mantle material into two geochemically distinct types:

Apatite A: is inferred to result from the metasomatism by CO 2 -and H 2 O-rich fluids
derived from a primitive mantle source region; 2. Apatite B: compositions are consistent with the crystallization from magmas within the carbonate-silicate compositional spectrum.
This classification is based on halogen content, presence or absence of structural CO 2 , Sr and trace elements (especially U, Th and light rare-earth) and association with either metasomatized mantle wall-rock peridotites (Apatite A) or high-pressure magmatic crystallization products (Apatite B) [4], [69], [70].
In addition, apatite can be used as a probe to determine the petrogenetic evolution of granites, and significant amounts of research were devoted to the use of apatite in granitic rocks to distinguish between S-and I-type granites [4], [71].
The chemical composition of apatite is also a useful guideline for the petrogenetic and metallogenic history of magmas for the following reasons [4]: • Apatite Eu and Ce anomalies provide the evidence of the redox state of the magmas that formed the host granitic rocks, with Eu enrichment and Ce depletion being indicative of oxidized magma and Eu depletion and Ce enrichment being indicative of reduced magma.
• Apatite 87 Sr/ 86 Sr ratios reflect the Sr isotopic composition of the host granitic rocks.
• Apatite F and Cl concentrations can reflect the enrichment or depletion of halogens within the host granitoids, with apatite associated with slab dehydration containing more Cl and less F, whereas apatites related to magmas formed by partial melting of the crust contain less Cl and more F.
In recent sedimentary systems, the major phosphorus deposition occurs within upwelling zones at continental margins. Upwelling of deep ocean waters rich in phosphorus triggers high biological production in the photic zone and eventually high concentration of phosphorus in organic-rich sediments, as in recent Namibian and Peruan shelves [72], [73], [74], [75].

Cycle of phosphorus
In the Earth's crust, phosphorus takes the second place after carbon, and in comparison with all known elements, it takes about 12th place in natural abundance [25]. The phosphorus cycle is quite different from the nitrogen and sulfur cycles in which phosphorus is present in only one oxidation state and it forms no gases stable in biosphere or atmosphere. Also, in contrast to nitrogen and sulfur, substantial proportions of phosphorus in soil appear in inorganic form [76], [77].
About 10 Mt of phosphorus are released by weathering of apatite annually. In soil, monobasic (H 2 PO 4 − ) and dibasic (HPO 4 2− ) phosphates are generally available to plants. Phosphates are precipitated by calcium in alkaline soils and most of phosphate is adsorbed on aluminum and iron oxides in acidic soils. Phosphates are most readily available in slightly acidic to neutral soil. Much of such phosphorus in surface soils appears in organic matter. This phosphorus is used repeatedly by recycling in plants and organisms that decompose the plant detritus. Little amount of phosphorus is lost by leaching through soils, but the erosion losses of soil particles and the plant detritus carried off to aquatic systems may be substantial [76]. The availability of phosphorus is a major factor limiting the biomass production in both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Mycorrhizas are efficient scavengers of phosphorus for plants growing in soils with limited availability of this element. The phosphorus fertilization in agricultural lands can have detrimental effect, as it increases phosphate amounts in the runoff soil resulting in the accumulation of phosphate in aquatic plants and algal growth. If the decomposers of plants and algae use practically all oxygen from water, the habitat becomes unsuitable for fish and other aquatic animals. The process of abundant nutrient-induced biomass production in lakes and rivers and its decay to deplete the water oxygen is called the eutrophication [25], [76], [78].
Despite the advantage for which phosphorus is used, it is doubtful that man has significant contribution to the Earth's cycle of phosphorus (Fig. 11). The 2·10 9 tons of mined phosphate rock is less than 0.15% of known reserves of phosphorus ore and less than 1·10 −5 % of the Earth's cycle of phosphorus [78].
At least 100 millions years before humankind exerted any influence on the cycles of phosphorus, the pattern had already been established (Fig. 12). Phosphorus was continuously leached from igneous rocks as the rocks were weathered to sedimentary deposits and this released phosphorus flowed to the seas, which had long since become saturated with phosphorus. Each new addition causes a similar quantity of phosphorus to precipitate as sediment. If the precipitate formed when an island sea had invaded a land area, the new sediment became landlocked. The new landlocked sedimentary deposits are more easily leached than igneous rocks from which they are derived. When the seas recede sufficiently to expose the new sediments to the greater solvent action of fresh water, the sediments begin to weather and the cycle is complete. Best estimates of the cycle time of phosphorus in the oceans today are in the range of 50,000 years. This is a short period compared to 3·10 9 years, which were required for the saturation of oceans for the first time [78]. Recently, man has only a slightly stronger influence on the total amount of the Earth's phosphorus than his prehistoric ancestors. If man made a significant alteration in the cycles of phosphorus, it had an impact on the cycles of fresh surface waters. The detergent phosphates have been blamed for degrading freshwater lakes and there is no doubt that several lakes have been overabundant with phosphates and sewage. Sewage treatment will alleviate most of the problems associated with point-source loading of lakes [78].
The overall natural and artificial cycles involving phosphorus are introduced in Fig. 13.

Weathering of apatite
Weathering and leaching processes from millions of years ago led to the transfer of phosphate to rivers and oceans where it was concentrated in shells, bones and marine organism that were deposited on the sea floor. Subsequent uplift and other geological movements led to these accumulations becoming dry land deposits [25], [78].
Generally, weathering of apatite occurs synergistically through biotic and abiotic processes and leads to the release of mineral phosphate. Inorganic phosphate cannot be assimilated by plants, but it can be converted to the bioavailable form orthophosphate (HPO 4 2− , H 2 PO 4 − ) by some species of phosphate-solubilizing fungi and bacteria. The main mechanism underlying the microbial phosphate solubilization is the secretion of organic acids that, by changing the soil pH and acting as chelators, may induce the dissolution of phosphorus from minerals and its release into the pore water of soils [79], [80]. The dissolution of apatite is described in Section 3.4.
Apatite represents an important source of inorganic P for natural ecosystems and may favor the establishment of microbial communities able to exploit it [79]. The microorganisms can cause the fixation or immobilization of phosphate, either by promoting the formation of inorganic precipitates or by the assimilation of phosphate into organic cell constituents on intracellular polyphosphate granules. Insoluble forms of inorganic phosphorus, e.g. calcium, aluminum and iron phosphates, may be solubilized through the microbial action. The mechanisms by which the microbes accomplish this solubilization vary [44]: i.
The first mechanism may be the production of inorganic or organic acids that attack the insoluble phosphates. ii.
The second mechanism may be the production of chelators such as gluconate and 2ketogluconate, citrate, oxalate and lactate. All these chelators can complex the cation portion of insoluble phosphate salts and thus force their dissociation.

iii.
The third mechanism of phosphate solubilization may be the reduction of iron in ferric phosphate, e.g. strengite (Fe 3+ PO 4 ·2H 2 O [81]), to ferrous iron by enzymes and metabolic products of nitrate reducers such as Pseudomonas fluorescens and Alcaligenes spp. in sediments.

iv.
The fourth mechanism is the production of hydrogen sulfide (H 2 S), which can react with iron phosphate and precipitate it as iron sulfide, thereby mobilizing phosphate, as in the reaction [44]: The phosphate-solubilizing ability is a feature of many free-living and plant-symbiotic bacterial taxa, such as [79]: • Pseudomonas [82]: the genus Pseudomonas sensu stricto comprises many species characterized by their metabolic diversity and by a wide range of niches that they can colonize.
• Rhizobium [83]: specific group of bacteria that have the capability of symbiotic nitrogen fixation.
• Burkholderia [84]: aerobic, non-spore-forming bacteria. Burkholderia is very versatile and occupies a wide range of ecological niches.
Microbial rock weathering is common in all climate zones and usually acts very slowly [80].

Fission track and apatite fission-track analysis
The fission-track (FT) dating is a radiometric dating method 26 based on the analysis of radiation damage trails (fission tracks) in uranium-bearing, non-conductive minerals and glasses. It is routinely applied to the minerals apatite, zircon and titanite. Fission tracks are produced continuously through geological time as a result of spontaneous fission track of 238 U atoms 27 that undergo spontaneous fission. 28 The atom splits into two parts that move rapidly in opposite directions, creating a long thin region of damage. The submicroscopic features with an initial width of approximately 10 nm and the length of up to 20 μm can be revealed by chemical etching. 29 Crucially, fission tracks are semi-stable features that can self-repair (shorten and eventually disappear) by the process known as annealing at a rate that is a function of both time and temperature. The extent of any track shortening (exposure to elevated temperatures) in a sample can be quantified by examining the distribution of fission-track lengths [6], [85], [86], [87], [88].
This unique sensitivity of the apatite fission-track system is now of considerable economic importance due to the coincidence between the temperature range over which annealing occurs and that over which liquid hydrocarbons are generated. Other applications include the determination of timing of emplacement and the thermal history of ore deposits. There is 26 Radiometric dating techniques are, in general, complementary to one another, and each method produces an age with the special meaning, such as the last outgassing, the last melting accompanied by mixing with isotopically separate material and the last heating to remove the track. Fission-track dating is conceptually the simplest of several dating techniques that provide absolute measures of time from slow but statistically steady decay of radioactive nuclides [86]. 27 Most radiometric dating processes are based on the statistical regularity of the decay of one parent radionuclide into a daughter nuclide, for example, 40 K into 40 Ar, 87 Rb into 87 Sr or 238 U , 235 U and 232 Th into 206 Pb, 207 Pb and 208 Pb, respectively. The age of sample can be then determined by measuring relative abundance of parent and daughter in any pair. The major isotope of uranium ( 238 U) decays at a spontaneous rate of ~10 −16 per year [86]. 28 Fission track can also be created artificially (induced track) by irradiating the mineral specimen with thermal neutrons in a nuclear [88]. 29 The mineral grain is ground and polished to expose a flat surface inside the crystal. It is then immersed in a chemical etchant that preferentially attacks the regions of damage, widening them and making them visible under optical microscope. The track appears in the apatite torch readily in 20 to 30 s when immersed in diluted nitric acid [88].
Apatite is the most frequently used material for fission-track dating [92]. Apatite fissiontrack (AFT) analysis serves as a thermochronological tool to investigate the low-temperature thermal history of rocks below ~120°C [93], [94]. The estimates of closure temperatures for fission-track retention in apatite are usually in the range from 75 to 120°C at cooling rates between 1 and 100°C/m.y. [6].
Thermochronology may be described as the quantitative study of the thermal histories of rocks using temperature-sensitive radiometric dating methods such as 40 Ar/ 39 Ar and K-Ar, fission track and (U-Th)/He. Among these different methods, apatite fission track and apatite (U-Th-Sm)/He (AHe) are now, perhaps, the most widely used thermochronometers, as they are the most sensitive to low temperatures (typically between 40 and 125°C for the durations of heating and cooling in the extent of 10 6 years). They are ideal for investigating the tectonic and climatedriven surficial interactions that take place within the top few (<5 km) kilometers of the Earth's crust. These processes govern the landscape evolution, influence the climate and generate the natural resources essential to the well-being of mankind [85], [95].

Extraterrestrial apatite
On Earth, magmatic volatiles (i.e. H 2 O, F, Cl, C-species and S-species) play an important role in the physicochemical processes that control thermal stabilities of minerals and melts, in magma eruptive processes and in the transportation of economically important metals. On the Moon, magmatic volatiles in igneous systems are poorly understood, and the magmatic volatile inventory of lunar interior, aside from being very low, is not well constrained. Although the Moon is a volatile-depleted planetary body, there is evidence indicating that magmatic volatiles have played a role in igneous processes on the Moon. Specifically, magmatic volatiles were implicated as the propellants that drove fire-fountain eruptions, which produced the pyroclastic glass deposits encountered at the Apollo 15 and 17 sites [96]. That is supported by recent discoveries of water-rich apatite from lunar mare basalts [97], [98].
Apatite was found in a large number of samples of igneous lunar rocks, although it typically occurred in only trace amounts and is typically reported as coexisting with REE-merrillite [(Mg,Fe) 2 REE 2 Ca 16 P 14 O 56 ], and those two minerals make up the primary mineralogical budget for P on the Moon [96]. Merrillite, also known as the mineral whitlockite (or more precious and dehydrogenated whitlockite) [99], is one of the main phosphate minerals, along with apatite, which occur in lunar rocks, in Martian meteorites and in many other groups of meteorites. Significant structural differences between terrestrial whitlockite and lunar (and meteoritic) varieties require the use of "merrillite" name for the H-free extraterrestrial material, and the systematic enrichment of REE in lunar merrillite requires the use of "REE-merrillite". Lunar merrillite, ideally (Mg,Fe 2+ ,Mn 2+ ) 2 [Ca 18−x (Y,REE) x ] (Na 2−x )(P,Si) 14 O 56 , contains high concentrations of Y + REE [100], [101]. Lunar merrillite (Fig. 14(a), trigonal, the space group R3C with the cell parameters a = 10.2909 Å, c = 36.8746 Å, c:a = 3.5832 and V = 3381.93 Å 3 ) and terrestrial whitlockite (Fig. 14(b), trigonal, the space group R3C with the cell parameters a = 10.3300 Å, c = 37.1030 Å, c:a = 3.5918 and V = 3428.79 Å 3 ) have largely similar atomic arrangements, but the phases differ due to the presence or absence of hydrogen. In whitlockite, H is an essential element and allows the charge balance. Hydrogen is incorporated into the whitlockite atomic arrangement by disordering one of the phosphate tetrahedra and forming the PO 3 (OH) group. Lunar merrillite is devoid of hydrogen; thus, no disordered tetrahedral groups exist. The charge balance for the substituents Y and REE (for Ca) is maintained by Si 4+ ↔ P 5+ tetrahedral substitution and □ ↔ Na + substitution at Na site [99], [102].
A number of sources potentially contributed to the overall inventory of lunar water, including primary indigenous water acquired during lunar accretion, late addition of water through asteroidal and cometary impacts and solar wind implanting H into lunar soils. The average D/H ratios of apatite in norite (Apollo sample 78235) and in the granite clast (14303) are consistent with the estimates for the H isotopic composition of recent bulk-Earth and terrestrial mantle. By contrast, the average H isotopic composition of apatites in norite 77215 is lower. The content of water in norite parental melts provides strong evidence that the magmas involved in secondary crust production on the Moon were hydrated, in agreement with recent findings of water in lunar ferroan anorthosites. Water they contain, locked in the crystalline structure of apatite, is characterized by an H isotopic composition similar to that on Earth and in some carbonaceous chondrites [103].
Apatite preserves a record of halogen and water fugacities that existed during the waning stages of crystallization of planetary magmas, when they became saturated in phosphates. The thermodynamic formalism based on apatite-merrillite equilibria that makes it possible to compare the relative values of halogen and water fugacities in Martian, lunar and terrestrial basalts, accounting for possible differences in pressure, temperature and oxygen fugacities among the planets, was described by DOUCE and RODEN [104].
They showed that planetary bodies have distinctive ratios among volatile fugacities at apatite saturation and that these fugacities are, in some cases, related in a consistent way to volatile fugacities in the mantle magma sources. Their analysis shows that the Martian mantle parental to basaltic SNC meteorites was dry and poor in both fluorine and chlorine compared to the terrestrial mantle. Limited data available from Mars show no secular variations in mantle halogen and water fugacities from ~4 Ga to ~180 Ma. Water and halogens found in recent Martian surface rocks have thus resided in the planet's surficial systems since at least 4 Ga and may have been degassed from the planet's interior during the primordial crust-forming event.
In comparison to the Earth and Mars, the Moon, and possibly the eucrite parent body too, appear to be strongly depleted not only in H 2 O but also in Cl 2 relative to H 2 O. The chlorine depletion is the strongest in mare basalts, perhaps reflecting an eruptive process characteristic with large-scale lunar magmatism [104].
Mars does not recycle crustal materials via the plate tectonics. For this reason, the magmatic water reservoir of the Martian mantle has not been affected by the surface processes, and the deuterium/hydrogen (D/H) ratio of this water should represent the original primordial Martian value. Following this logic, hydrous primary igneous minerals on the Martian surface should also carry this primordial D/H ratio, assuming no assimilation of Martian atmospheric water during the crystallization and no major hydrogen fractionation during the melt degassing. Hydrous primary igneous minerals, such as apatite and amphibole, are present in Martian meteorites here on Earth. Provided these minerals have not been affected by terrestrial weathering, Martian atmospheric water or shock processes after the crystallization, they should contain a good approximation of the primordial Martian D/H ratio. As Nakhla was seen to fall on the Egyptian desert in 1911, the terrestrial contamination is minimized in this meteorite. The nakhlites are also among the least shocked Martian meteorites. Therefore, apatite within Nakhla could contain primordial Martian hydrogen isotope ratios. The similar D/H ratios indicate that the Earth and Mars, and possibly the other terrestrial planets, accreted water from the same source [105].
Vesta, as the second most massive asteroid, has long been perceived as anhydrous. Recent studies suggesting the presence of hydrated minerals and past subsurface water have challenged this long-standing perception. The volatile components indicate the presence of apatite in eucrites. Eucritic apatite is fluorine rich with minor chlorine and hydroxyl (calculated by difference) [106], [107], [108].

The future of phosphate rocks
The biochemist and sci-fi author IZAAK ASIMOV said [60]: "In the future coal will be probably substituted by nuclear energy, wood by plastics, meat by yeast and suspecting solitude by friendship, but there is no substitute for phosphorus." The search for phosphate rock deposits became a global effort in the 20th century as the demand for phosphate rocks increased. The development of deposits further intensified in the 1950s and 1960s. The world production reached its peak in 1987 -1988 and then again in 2008 with over 160 million metric tons (mmt) of the product. Phosphate rock mining has evolved over time, and worldwide, it relies on high volume and advanced technology using mainly open-pit mining methods and advanced transportation systems to move hundreds of millions of tons of overburden to produce hundreds of millions of tons of ore, which are beneficiated to produce approximately 160 mmt of phosphate rock concentrate per year. The concentrate of suitable grade and chemical quality is then used to produce phosphoric acid, the basis of many fertilizer and non-fertilizer products [23]. The world phosphate production rate since 1850 according to JASINSKI [109] and ABOUZEID et al [20] is shown in Fig. 15.
The estimates of the world's phosphate reserves and availability of exploitable deposits vary greatly and the assessments of how long it will take until these reserves are exhausted vary also considerably. Furthermore, it is commonly recognized that the high-quality reserves are being depleted expeditiously and that the prevailing management of phosphate, a finite nonrenewable source, is not fully in accordance with the principles of sustainability. The depletion of current economically exploitable reserves is estimated to be completed in some 60 to 130 years. Using the median reserve estimates and under reasonable predictions, it appears that phosphate reserves would last for at least 100+ years [20]. Preliminary estimates of phosphate rock reserves range from 15,000 mmt to over 1,000,000 mmt, while the estimates of phosphate rock resources range from about 91,000 mmt to over 1,000,000 mmt. Using available literature, the reserves of various countries were assessed in the terms of reserves of concentrate. The IFDC 30 estimate of worldwide reserve is approximately 60,000 mmt of concentrate. Based on the data gathered, collated and analyzed for the IFDC report, there is no indication that a "peak phosphorus" event will occur in 20 -25 years. Based on the data reviewed, and assuming current rates of production, phosphate rock concentrate reserves to produce fertilizers will be available for the next 300 -400 years [23].
Phosphate rock prices will increase when the demand approaches the limits of supply. When the phosphate rock prices increase, some resources will become reserves, marginal mining 30  projects will become viable and the production will be stimulated. In the future, fuel and fuelrelated transportation costs may become even more important components in the world phosphate rock production scenario. The political disruption is always an unknown factor, and it can profoundly influence the supply and demand for fertilizer raw materials on a worldwide basis [22].

Non-apatitic phosphate minerals
Apart from those in the supergroup of apatite minerals, the well-known phosphate minerals include [25]: [110], [111]: is orthorhombic mineral (space group I4/MMM) of the composition of (Ca[(UO 2 )(PO 4 )] 2 (H 2 O) 11 7 (Fig. 17) [110].  [113]: CaAl 3 (OH) 6 [PO 3 (O 1/2 (OH) 1/2 ] 2 , has hexagonal structure (a = 7.005 Å and c = 16.192 Å), which is analogous with alunite. The structure of mineral ( Fig. 18) consists of corner-sharing Al octahedra, which are linked into trigonal and hexagonal rings to form the sheets perpendicular to the c-axis. Ca ions, surrounded by 12 oxygen and hydroxyl ions, lie in large cavities between the sheets. Each phosphate tetrahedron shares three corners with three Al octahedra from a trigonal ring in the sheet. The unshared corner is turned away from the trigonal hole towards the adjacent sheet to which it is hydrogen bonded. The mineral "deltaite" was found to be identical to crandallite, within the accuracy of the structural results. Fig. 18. The structure of mineral crandallite [113] viewed along the c-axis. [114], [115]: monoclinic mineral of the composition of MgAl 2 (PO 4 ) 2 (OH) 2 , which crystallizes in the P2 1 /C space group and has the cell parameters: a = 7.16 Å, b = 7.26 Å and c = 7.24 Å and β = 120.67°. The mineral is the magnesium analogue of scorzalite (Fe 2+ Al 2 (PO 4 ) 2 (OH) 2 ). Named in 1795 by MARTEN H. KLAPROTH from the Arabic word meaning "heaven," in allusion to its color.  . 19. The form and the structure of lazulite [114] viewed along the c-axis. [116]: tetragonal mineral of the composition of NaCaAl 6 (PO 4 ) 4 (OH) 9 [117], [118]: is natural light rare-earth element phosphate that generally contains large amounts of uranium and thorium. The monazite-type compounds (AXO 4 , Fig. 21) form an extended family that is described in this review in the terms of field of stability versus composition. They crystallize in a monoclinic lattice with the space group P2 1 /N (Z = 4). Monazite (Fig. 20) and xenotime dimorphs 31 [119] are the most ubiquitous rare-earth (REE) minerals. Monazite incorporates preferentially larger, light rare-earth elements (LREEs, here, La-Gd), whereas xenotime tends to incorporate smaller, heavy rare-earth elements (HREEs, here, Tb-Lu, and Y). [120], [121] 12 , Fig. 22(a)) and zeunerite (Cu[(UO 2 )(AsO 4 )] 2 (H 2 O) 12 , Fig. 22(b) 8 ), belong to the autunite and meta-autunite groups, respectively, which  Phosphate Rocks http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62214 make up together approximately 40 mineral species of hydrated uranyl phosphates and arsenates. The structures, compositions and stabilities of minerals of the autunite and meta-autunite groups are of high interest because of their environmental significance. They are widespread and abundant and exert an impact on the mobility of uranium in phosphate-bearing systems and soils contaminated by actinides.

Tobernite
These minerals contain the autunite-type sheet, of the composition of [(UO 2 )(PO 4 )] − , which involves the sharing of equatorial vertices of uranyl square bipyramids with phosphate tetrahedra. In each of these structures, Cu 2+ cations are located between the sheets in Jahn-Teller 32 [122] distorted (4 + 2) octahedra, with short bonds to four H 2 O groups in a squareplanar arrangement and two longer distances to oxygen atoms of uranyl ions. A symmetrically independent H 2 O group is held in each structure only by H-bonding, and in torbernite (and in zeunerite), it forms the square-planar sets of interstitial H 2 O groups both above and below the planes of Cu 2+ cations. In metatorbernite (and in metazeunerite), the square-planar sets of interstitial H 2 O groups are either above or below the planes of Cu 2+ cations. The bond-length-constrained refinement provides the crystal-chemically reasonable descriptions of H-bonding in those four structures [120]. [123], [124]: CuAl 6 (PO 4 ) 4 (OH) 8 ·4H 2 O is a copper analogue of triclinic mineral fausite ZnAl 6 (PO 4 ) 4 (OH) 8 ·4H 2 O (the space group P1 with the cell parameters a = 7.410 Å, b = 7.633 Å, c = 9.904 Å, α = 68.4°, β = 69.65° and γ = 65.05°). The structure (Fig. 23) consists of distorted MO 6 polyhedra (M= Zn, Cu), AIO 6 octahedra and PO 4 tetrahedra. By the edgeand corner-sharing of these polyhedra, a fairly dense three-dimensional framework is formed, which is further strengthened by a system of hydrogen bonds. The metal atoms in the unique MO 6 (M = Zn or Cu) polyhedron show a distorted [2 + 2 + 2] coordination, the distortion being more pronounced in turquoise. About 10% of the M site is vacant in both minerals. In turquoise, a previously undetected structural site with very low occupancy of (possibly) Cu is present at the position (1/2,0,1/2).  [124]. 32 According to the Jahn-Teller theorem, any nonlinear molecule in a degenerate electronic state will be unstable and will undergo some kind of distortion that will lower its symmetry so as to remove the degeneracy of the electronic state and also to attain lower energy. The Jahn-Teller effect is termed as static when there is permanent distortion in the structure of molecule [122]. [125], [126], [127]: is monoclinic mineral of the composition of Fe 3 (PO 4 ) 3 ·8H 2 O, which crystallizes in the space group of C1 2 /M with the cell parameters a = 10.08 Å, b = 13.43 Å, c = 4.70 Å and β = 104.50° (Fig. 24). The mineral was named by ABRAHAM GOTTLOB WERNER in 1817 after JOHN HENRY VIVIAN. Vivianite belongs to the simplest group of minerals with the composition given by general formula: A 3 (XO 4 ) 2 ·8H 2 O, where A = Mg, Zn, Ni, Co or Fe and X is P or As [128].  [129]: the mineral of the composition of Al 3 (PO 4 ) 2 (OH) 3 ·4.5-5H 2 O (the space group Pcmn, a = 9.62 Å, b = 17.36 Å and c = 6.99 Å). The two aluminum atoms in the structure are octahedrally coordinated (Fig. 25): one is bonded to two O atoms, two -OH groups and two H 2 O molecules and the other to three O, two (-OH) and one H 2 O. Phosphorus is in tetrahedral coordination with oxygen. Al octahedra, linked through (OH) corners, form chains parallel to the c-axis, and P tetrahedra are attached to this chain by sharing O atoms of subsequent octahedra. An extra H 2 O molecule occupies the large cavity between the chains, and as indicated by a high temperature factor, it has a statistical distribution within this cavity.  [129].

Wavellite
Phosphate Rocks http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/62214 10. Xenotime [118]: monazite (Fig. 26) is isostructural with zircon (I4 1 /AMD). Monazite atomic arrangement as well as that of xenotime is based on [001] chains of intervening phosphate tetrahedra and RE polyhedra, with REO, polyhedron in xenotime that accommodates heavy lanthanides (Tb-Lu in the synthetic phases) and REO polyhedron in monazite that preferentially incorporates larger light rare-earth elements (La-Gd). As the structure "transforms" from xenotime to monazite, the crystallographic properties are comparable along the [001] chains, with the structural adjustments to the different sizes of REE atoms occurring principally in (001). Isostructural arsenate analogues of many phosphate minerals are known, and in some cases, vanadates too. Some orthophosphates capable of forming complete ranges of solid solutions with the corresponding orthoarsenates are [25]: Phosphate minerals, like silicate minerals, are found with a great variety of cations. Unlike the latter group that contains numerous types of condensed silicate anions, almost all phosphate minerals are orthophosphates that contain PO 4 3− anion. Non-phosphorus anions, such as O 2− , OH − , F − , Cl − , SO 4 2− , SiO 4 4− and AsO 4 3− , may also be present in these stoichiometric (or as occluded) materials [25].