Plasmodium lophurae hemozoin (malarial pigment) is composed of proteinaceous macromolecules bonded to iron III protoporphyrin IX by coordination bonding, van der Waals forces, and hydrophobic interactions but not by covalent bonding. Hemozoin is not composed of partially degraded globin peptides coordinated to heme, since fragments of molecular size less than that of globin monomers were not observed by SDS-PAGE. Two major polypeptides constituted the macromolecular portion of hemozoin; these had molecular weights of 21,000 and 15,000. The 21,000-molecular-weight protein is probably of parasite origin. The 15,000-molecular-weight polypeptide is believed to consist of globin monomers, and indicates the presence of irreversibly denatured hemoglobin (hemiglobin), as a constituent of hemozoin. The formation of hemozoin is hypothesized to play the following roles: protection of the parasite against molecular oxygen and compartmentation of the iron porphyrin which is a product of hemoglobin digestion by the plasmodium. © 1979.