Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/George-ericksenite> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 92 of
92
with 100 triples per page.
- George-ericksenite abstract "George-ericksenite is a mineral with the chemical formula Na6CaMg(IO3)6(CrO4)2(H2O)12. It is vitreous, pale yellow to bright lemon yellow, brittle, and features a prismatic to acicular crystal habit along [001] and somewhat flattened crystal habit on {110}. It was first encountered in 1984 at the Pinch Mineralogical Museum. One specimen of dietzeite from Oficina Chacabuco, Chile had bright lemon-yellow micronodules on it. These crystals produced an X-ray powder diffraction pattern that did not match any XRD data listed for inorganic compounds. The X-ray diffraction pattern and powder mount were set aside until 1994. By then, the entire mineral collection from the Pinch Mineralogical Museum had been purchased by the Canadian Museum of Nature. The specimen was then retrieved and studied further. This study was successful and the new mineral george-ericksenite was discovered. The mineral was named for George E. Ericksen who was a research economic geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey for fifty years. The mineral and name have been approved by Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names (IMA). The specimen, polished thin section, and the actual crystal used for the structure determination are kept in the Display Series of the National Mineral Collection of Canada at the Canadian Museum of Nature, Ottawa, Ontario.".
- George-ericksenite wikiPageID "48107455".
- George-ericksenite wikiPageLength "13145".
- George-ericksenite wikiPageOutDegree "53".
- George-ericksenite wikiPageRevisionID "695458527".
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Acicular_(crystal_habit).
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Calcium.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Canadian_Museum_of_Nature.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Monoclinic_minerals.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Natural_materials.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sulfate_minerals.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Chile.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Chlorine.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Chromium.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Crystal.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Crystal_habit.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Dodecahedron.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Economic_geology.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Electron_microprobe.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Epoxy.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Gaussian_quadrature.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Hydrogen_bond.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Iodine.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Ion.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Ligand.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Magnesium.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Monoclinic_crystal_system.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Motif_(visual_arts).
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Octahedral_symmetry.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Octahedron.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Optical_spectrometer.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Ottawa.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Oxygen.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Polarization_(waves).
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Powder_diffraction.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Pyramid_(geometry).
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Sodium.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Space_group.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Sulfate_minerals.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Sulfur.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Trimer_(chemistry).
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Geological_Survey.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Valence_(chemistry).
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Water.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Zigzag.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLink Ångström.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageWikiLinkText "George-ericksenite".
- George-ericksenite birefringence "δ = 0.057".
- George-ericksenite category Sulfate_minerals.
- George-ericksenite cleavage "None observed".
- George-ericksenite color "Pale yellow to bright lemon yellow".
- George-ericksenite density "3.035".
- George-ericksenite diaphaneity "Transparent to translucent".
- George-ericksenite formula "Na6CaMg6212".
- George-ericksenite fracture "Unknown".
- George-ericksenite habit "Prismatic to acicular along [001] and somewhat flattened on {110}".
- George-ericksenite luster "Vitreous".
- George-ericksenite mohs "3".
- George-ericksenite name "George-ericksenite".
- George-ericksenite pleochroism "Slight; X 5 very pale yellow, Z 5 distinct yellow-green".
- George-ericksenite solubility "Extreme in cold water".
- George-ericksenite streak "Pale yellow".
- George-ericksenite strunz "4".
- George-ericksenite symmetry Monoclinic_crystal_system.
- George-ericksenite symmetry "Space group: C2/c".
- George-ericksenite system Monoclinic_crystal_system.
- George-ericksenite tenacity "Brittle".
- George-ericksenite twinning "None observed megascopically nor during single-crystal study".
- George-ericksenite unitCell "Z=4".
- George-ericksenite unitCell "a = 23.645 Å".
- George-ericksenite unitCell "b= 10.918 Å".
- George-ericksenite unitCell "c=15.768 Å".
- George-ericksenite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_mineral.
- George-ericksenite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- George-ericksenite subject Category:Monoclinic_minerals.
- George-ericksenite subject Category:Natural_materials.
- George-ericksenite subject Category:Sulfate_minerals.
- George-ericksenite hypernym Mineral.
- George-ericksenite type ChemicalSubstance.
- George-ericksenite type Mineral.
- George-ericksenite type ChemicalObject.
- George-ericksenite type Thing.
- George-ericksenite type Q7946.
- George-ericksenite comment "George-ericksenite is a mineral with the chemical formula Na6CaMg(IO3)6(CrO4)2(H2O)12. It is vitreous, pale yellow to bright lemon yellow, brittle, and features a prismatic to acicular crystal habit along [001] and somewhat flattened crystal habit on {110}. It was first encountered in 1984 at the Pinch Mineralogical Museum. One specimen of dietzeite from Oficina Chacabuco, Chile had bright lemon-yellow micronodules on it.".
- George-ericksenite label "George-ericksenite".
- George-ericksenite sameAs Q3760415.
- George-ericksenite sameAs George-ericksenite.
- George-ericksenite sameAs Q3760415.
- George-ericksenite wasDerivedFrom George-ericksenite?oldid=695458527.
- George-ericksenite isPrimaryTopicOf George-ericksenite.
- George-ericksenite name "George-ericksenite".