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- Sweetite abstract "Sweetite has a general formula of Zn(OH)2. The name is given after a curator of mineral department of The British Museum, Jessie May Sweet (1901-1979). It occurs in an oxidized vein in limestone bedrock with galena, ashoverite, wülfingite, anglesite, cerussite, hydrocerussite, litharge, fluorite, palygorskite and calcite.Sweetite is tetragonal, which means crystallographically it contains one axis of unequal length and two axes of equal length. The angles between three of the axes are all 90°. It belongs to the space group 4/m. Some crystals show evidence of a basal plane and a few are tabular. In terms of its optical properties, sweetite has two indices of refraction, 1.635 along the ordinary ray and 1.628 along the extraordinary ray. The index of refraction is the velocity of light in a vacuum divided by the velocity of light in medium. It also has the birefringence of 0.007. The birefringence means the decomposition of light into two rays when passing through a mineral. Sweetite is 1.64 - 1.65 in relief, which is medium to high in intensity and means a measure of the relative difference between the index of refraction of a mineral and its surrounding medium.Sweetite is mostly found from a limestone quarry 200–300 m northwest of Milltown, near Ashover, Derbyshire, England.".
- Sweetite wikiPageID "28854252".
- Sweetite wikiPageLength "3238".
- Sweetite wikiPageOutDegree "17".
- Sweetite wikiPageRevisionID "410384963".
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Anglesite.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Ashoverite.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Calcite.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hydroxide_minerals.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Zinc_minerals.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Cerussite.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Fluorite.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Galena.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Hydrocerussite.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Limestone.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Litharge.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Palygorskite.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Redox.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Tetragonal_crystal_system.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Vein_(geology).
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLink Wülfingite.
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLinkText "Sweetite".
- Sweetite wikiPageWikiLinkText "sweetite".
- Sweetite birefringence "0.007".
- Sweetite category "Hydroxide mineral".
- Sweetite cleavage "None".
- Sweetite color "Colorless, white".
- Sweetite diaphaneity "Transparent to translucent".
- Sweetite formula "Zn2".
- Sweetite fracture "Irregular".
- Sweetite gravity "3.33".
- Sweetite habit "Bipyramidal".
- Sweetite luster "Vitreous".
- Sweetite mohs "3".
- Sweetite molweight "99.4".
- Sweetite name "Sweetite".
- Sweetite opticalprop "uniaxial".
- Sweetite refractive "nω = 1.635 nε = 1.628".
- Sweetite streak "White".
- Sweetite strunz "4".
- Sweetite symmetry "Tetragonal, 4/m".
- Sweetite system Tetragonal_crystal_system.
- Sweetite unitCell "a= 8.22 Å, c= 14.34 Å, V= 968.93 ų; Z = 20".
- Sweetite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_mineral.
- Sweetite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Mineral-stub.
- Sweetite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Sweetite subject Category:Hydroxide_minerals.
- Sweetite subject Category:Zinc_minerals.
- Sweetite type ChemicalSubstance.
- Sweetite type Mineral.
- Sweetite type ChemicalObject.
- Sweetite type Thing.
- Sweetite type Q7946.
- Sweetite comment "Sweetite has a general formula of Zn(OH)2. The name is given after a curator of mineral department of The British Museum, Jessie May Sweet (1901-1979). It occurs in an oxidized vein in limestone bedrock with galena, ashoverite, wülfingite, anglesite, cerussite, hydrocerussite, litharge, fluorite, palygorskite and calcite.Sweetite is tetragonal, which means crystallographically it contains one axis of unequal length and two axes of equal length. The angles between three of the axes are all 90°.".
- Sweetite label "Sweetite".
- Sweetite sameAs Q3978793.
- Sweetite sameAs Sweetite.
- Sweetite sameAs m.0dd9yhf.
- Sweetite sameAs Q3978793.
- Sweetite wasDerivedFrom Sweetite?oldid=410384963.
- Sweetite isPrimaryTopicOf Sweetite.
- Sweetite name "Sweetite".