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  • Article - 20 May 2014
    Dyscrasite is a silver antimonide mineral that was first described in 1797 in the Wenzel Mine, Black Forest, Germany. The mineral was named after the Greek work, meaning ‘bad alloy’.
  • Article - 6 May 2013
    An empirical method is used by Rigaku for the elemental analysis and measurement of iron (Fe) content in mining materials.
  • Article - 15 Aug 2013
    Scotlandite is a monoclinic-prismatic mineral containing sulfur, oxygen, and lead. The mineral was discovered in 1984 in the Susanna mines of the Leadhills, South Lanarkshire, Scotland. It is named...
  • Article - 5 Sep 2013
    Romeite is a calcium antimonite mineral first discovered in 1841 from the San Marcel mine, Piedmont, near Vipiteno, Italy. It is a member of stibiconite group. The mineral was named after Jean...
  • Article - 12 May 2014
    Gordaite is a trigonal-pyramidal mineral containing zinc, sulfur, sodium, oxygen, hydrogen and chlorine. It was first discovered in 1996 from the San Francisco mine, Sierra Gorda District, Tocopilla...
  • Article - 3 Jun 2014
    Buckhornite is an orthorhombic-dipyramidal black mineral containing tellurium, sulfur, lead, gold and bismuth. It was first described in 1992 from the Buckhorn mine, near Jamestown, Boulder, Colorado,...
  • Article - 5 Sep 2013
    Fluoborite having a hexagonal crystal system was first described in 1926 from the Huerta del Vinagre mine, Spain. It was named for its essential components fluorine and boron.
  • Article - 29 May 2014
    Voglite was first discovered in Elias mine near Joachimstal, Bohemia, Czech Republic in 1853. It is a secondary mineral formed from the alteration of Uraninite. It was named after Josef Florian Vogl,...
  • Article - 3 Jun 2014
    Wardite is a hydrous sodium aluminum phosphate hydroxide mineral and crystallizes in the tetragonal trapezohedral class. It was named after Henry Augustus Ward, an American collector and dealer in...
  • Article - 4 Jun 2014
    Ferrarisite is a triclinic-pinacoidal mineral consisting of oxygen, hydrogen, calcium and arsenic. It was named after Professor Giovanni Ferraris, who worked on crystal structures of various arsenate...

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