Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Smithsonite> ?p ?o }
- Smithsonite abstract "Smithsonite, or zinc spar, is zinc carbonate (ZnCO3), a mineral ore of zinc. Historically, smithsonite was identified with hemimorphite before it was realised that they were two distinct minerals. The two minerals are very similar in appearance and the term calamine has been used for both, leading to some confusion. The distinct mineral smithsonite was named in 1832 by François Sulpice Beudant in honor of English chemist and mineralogist James Smithson (c.1765–1829), whose bequest established the Smithsonian Institution and who first identified the mineral in 1802.Smithsonite is a variably colored trigonal mineral which only rarely is found in well formed crystals. The typical habit is as earthy botryoidal masses. It has a Mohs hardness of 4.5 and a specific gravity of 4.4 to 4.5. Smithsonite occurs as a secondary mineral in the weathering or oxidation zone of zinc-bearing ore deposits. It sometimes occurs as replacement bodies in carbonate rocks and as such may constitute zinc ore. It commonly occurs in association with hemimorphite, willemite, hydrozincite, cerussite, malachite, azurite, aurichalcite and anglesite. It forms two limited solid solution series, with substitution of manganese leading to rhodochrosite, and with iron, leading to siderite.".
- Smithsonite thumbnail Smithsonite_Kelly_Mine.jpg?width=300.
- Smithsonite wikiPageExternalLink calamine.html.
- Smithsonite wikiPageID "707790".
- Smithsonite wikiPageLength "4559".
- Smithsonite wikiPageOutDegree "44".
- Smithsonite wikiPageRevisionID "657931709".
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Anglesite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Aurichalcite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Azurite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Botryoidal.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Calamine_(mineral).
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Carbon.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Carbonate.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Carbonate_mineral.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Carbonate_minerals.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Carbonate_rock.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Calcite_group.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Carbonate_minerals.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Trigonal_minerals.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Zinc_minerals.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Cerussite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Chemist.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink English_people.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink François_Sulpice_Beudant.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Hemimorphite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Hydrozincite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Iron.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink James_Smithson.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink List_of_minerals.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink List_of_minerals_named_after_people.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Malachite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Manganese.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Mineralogist.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Mineralogy.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Mohs_hardness.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Mohs_scale_of_mineral_hardness.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink New_Mexico.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Ore.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Oxidation.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Oxygen.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Redox.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Rhodochrosite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Siderite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Smithsonian_Institution.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Socorro_County.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Socorro_County,_New_Mexico.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Solid_solution.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Specific_gravity.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Trigonal.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Trigonal_crystal_system.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink USA.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Weathering.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Willemite.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLink Zinc.
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLinkText "Smithsonite".
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLinkText "calamine".
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLinkText "smithsonite".
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLinkText "zinc carbonate".
- Smithsonite wikiPageWikiLinkText "zinc spar".
- Smithsonite birefringence "δ = 0.223 - 0.227".
- Smithsonite caption "A specimen of smithsonite from Kelly mine, Socorro County, New Mexico, USA .".
- Smithsonite category Carbonate_mineral.
- Smithsonite category Carbonate_minerals.
- Smithsonite cleavage "Perfect on [1011]".
- Smithsonite color "White, grey, yellow, green to apple-green, blue, pink, purple, bluish grey, and brown".
- Smithsonite diaphaneity "Translucent".
- Smithsonite fluorescence "May fluoresce pale green or pale blue under UV".
- Smithsonite formula "ZnCO3".
- Smithsonite fracture "Uneven, sub-conchoidal".
- Smithsonite gravity "4.4".
- Smithsonite habit "Uncommon as crystals, typically botryoidal, reniform, spherulitic; stalactitic, earthy, compact massive".
- Smithsonite hasPhotoCollection Smithsonite.
- Smithsonite imagesize "250".
- Smithsonite luster "Vitreous, may be pearly".
- Smithsonite mohs "4.5".
- Smithsonite name "Smithsonite".
- Smithsonite opticalprop "Uniaxial".
- Smithsonite refractive "nω = 1.842 - 1.850 nε = 1.619 - 1.623".
- Smithsonite streak "White".
- Smithsonite strunz "5".
- Smithsonite symmetry "Trigonal 2/m".
- Smithsonite system "Trigonal - Hexagonal Scalenohedral".
- Smithsonite tenacity "Brittle".
- Smithsonite twinning "None observed".
- Smithsonite unitCell "a = 4.6526 Å, c = 15.0257 Å; Z = 6".
- Smithsonite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Smithsonite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_mineral.
- Smithsonite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Smithsonite subject Category:Calcite_group.
- Smithsonite subject Category:Carbonate_minerals.
- Smithsonite subject Category:Trigonal_minerals.
- Smithsonite subject Category:Zinc_minerals.
- Smithsonite hypernym Carbonate.
- Smithsonite type ChemicalSubstance.
- Smithsonite type Group.
- Smithsonite type Mineral.
- Smithsonite type Group.
- Smithsonite type Oxide.