Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
However, that material was recently shown to be rich in boron and thus different from vesuvianite.
Von Leonhard used it for a mineral that was considered the same as vesuvianite.
Idocrase is an older synonym sometimes used for gemstone-quality vesuvianite.
The lamplight made the pale green vesuvianite flash and sparkle like the cold edge of a knife.
It was named manganvesuvianite for the significant manganese in its formula and its relation to vesuvianite.
He also reported on the diminution in density produced in garnet and vesuvianite by melting (1831).
Associated minerals include chalcocite, atacamite, native copper, diopside, grossular and vesuvianite.
Grossular is found in contact metamorphosed limestones with vesuvianite, diopside, wollastonite and wernerite.
Californite is a name sometimes used for jade-like vesuvianite, also known as California-, American- or Vesuvianite-jade.
Associated minerals include vesuvianite, chlorite, epidote, spinel, calcite, dolomite and magnetite.
The minerals that accompany them are calcite, epidote, vesuvianite, garnet, wollastonite, diopside and amphibole.
Associated minerals include garnets, vesuvianite, diopside, tremolite, epidote, plagioclase feldspar, pyroxene and calcite.
Hawthorne then turned his attention to a series of complex crystal-chemistry problems involving rock-forming minerals, such as staurolite, vesuvianite, pyroxenes, beryl, and tourmaline.
Discovered in South Africa and described in 2002, it was so named for the prevalence of manganese in its composition and its relation to vesuvianite.
Manganvesuvianite is a member of the vesuvianite group and is the manganese analogue of vesuvianite.
Typical minerals formed at this time include garnet, pyroxene, epidote, Cl-rich amphiboles, malayaite, vesuvianite, siderite and axinite.
It occurs associated with vesuvianite, chlorite, magnetite, rutile, diaspore, grossular, calcite, diopside and clinozoisite in various locations.
Typical mineral association includes cassiterite, wolframite, topaz, fluorite, apatite, tourmaline, quartz, grossular-andradite, diopside, vesuvianite and tremolite.
It occurs with talc, spinel, grossular, vesuvianite, clinopyroxene, monticellite, chondrodite, phlogopite, chlorite, quartz, calcite and dolomite.
In 1883, Arnold von Lasaulx made the first detailed description of vesuvianite containing up to 3.2 wt% MnO from Lower Silesia in Poland.
In 2000, vesuvianite was found containing up to 14.3 wt% MnO from the Kalahari manganese fields of Northern Cape Province, South Africa.
It occurs associated with diopside, wollastonite, idocrase, monticellite, okenite, vesuvianite, calcite and others at Crestmore, Riverside County, California, USA.
The area was quarried for limestone in the early 1900s, revealing varied associations of metamorphic minerals, including ellestadite (named as wilkeite) with garnet, vesuvianite and diopside, in blue calcite.
Minerals associated with humite include grossular, wollastonite, forsterite, monticellite, cuspidine, fluoborite, ludwigite, dolomite, calcite, talc, biotite, spinel, vesuvianite, sanidine, meionite and nepheline.
Ruizite occurs in association with apophyllite, bornite, calcite, chalcopyrite, datolite, diopside, grossular, inesite, junitoite, kinoite, orientite, pectolite, quartz, smectite, sphalerite, vesuvianite, and wollastonite.
Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
However, that material was recently shown to be rich in boron and thus different from vesuvianite.
Von Leonhard used it for a mineral that was considered the same as vesuvianite.
Idocrase is an older synonym sometimes used for gemstone-quality vesuvianite.
The lamplight made the pale green vesuvianite flash and sparkle like the cold edge of a knife.
It was named manganvesuvianite for the significant manganese in its formula and its relation to vesuvianite.
He also reported on the diminution in density produced in garnet and vesuvianite by melting (1831).
Associated minerals include chalcocite, atacamite, native copper, diopside, grossular and vesuvianite.
Grossular is found in contact metamorphosed limestones with vesuvianite, diopside, wollastonite and wernerite.
Californite is a name sometimes used for jade-like vesuvianite, also known as California-, American- or Vesuvianite-jade.
Associated minerals include vesuvianite, chlorite, epidote, spinel, calcite, dolomite and magnetite.
The minerals that accompany them are calcite, epidote, vesuvianite, garnet, wollastonite, diopside and amphibole.
Associated minerals include garnets, vesuvianite, diopside, tremolite, epidote, plagioclase feldspar, pyroxene and calcite.
Hawthorne then turned his attention to a series of complex crystal-chemistry problems involving rock-forming minerals, such as staurolite, vesuvianite, pyroxenes, beryl, and tourmaline.
Discovered in South Africa and described in 2002, it was so named for the prevalence of manganese in its composition and its relation to vesuvianite.
Manganvesuvianite is a member of the vesuvianite group and is the manganese analogue of vesuvianite.
Typical minerals formed at this time include garnet, pyroxene, epidote, Cl-rich amphiboles, malayaite, vesuvianite, siderite and axinite.
It occurs associated with vesuvianite, chlorite, magnetite, rutile, diaspore, grossular, calcite, diopside and clinozoisite in various locations.
Typical mineral association includes cassiterite, wolframite, topaz, fluorite, apatite, tourmaline, quartz, grossular-andradite, diopside, vesuvianite and tremolite.
It occurs with talc, spinel, grossular, vesuvianite, clinopyroxene, monticellite, chondrodite, phlogopite, chlorite, quartz, calcite and dolomite.
In 1883, Arnold von Lasaulx made the first detailed description of vesuvianite containing up to 3.2 wt% MnO from Lower Silesia in Poland.
In 2000, vesuvianite was found containing up to 14.3 wt% MnO from the Kalahari manganese fields of Northern Cape Province, South Africa.
It occurs associated with diopside, wollastonite, idocrase, monticellite, okenite, vesuvianite, calcite and others at Crestmore, Riverside County, California, USA.
The area was quarried for limestone in the early 1900s, revealing varied associations of metamorphic minerals, including ellestadite (named as wilkeite) with garnet, vesuvianite and diopside, in blue calcite.
Minerals associated with humite include grossular, wollastonite, forsterite, monticellite, cuspidine, fluoborite, ludwigite, dolomite, calcite, talc, biotite, spinel, vesuvianite, sanidine, meionite and nepheline.
Ruizite occurs in association with apophyllite, bornite, calcite, chalcopyrite, datolite, diopside, grossular, inesite, junitoite, kinoite, orientite, pectolite, quartz, smectite, sphalerite, vesuvianite, and wollastonite.
Vesuvianite, also known as idocrase, is a green, brown, yellow, or blue silicate mineral.
Hydrogrossular is found in massive crystal habit, sometimes grown in with idocrase.
It is found naturally as a translucent emerald-green crystal formed in thin sheets near the boundaries of idocrase or chlorite crystals.
A banded and mottled calc-silicate hornfels occurring with the limestone at Derry Falls, west-northwest of Braemar, has yielded malacolite, wollastonite, brown idocrase, garnet, sphene and hornblende.