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Magnesia

Magnesia

A species of Minerals

Magnesia may refer to: Magnesia (regional unit), the southeastern area of Thessaly in central Greece Ancient Magnesia, a historical region of Greece with borders differing from the modern regional unit Magnesia ad Sipylum, a city of Lydia, now Manisa in Turkey Battle of Magnesia, 190 BC, the concluding battle of the Roman–Seleucid War Magnesia on the Maeander, an ancient Greek city in Anatolia Magnesia Prefecture, a former prefecture of Greece Magnesia, a mythical city-state in Plato's Laws

General Info About Magnesia

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Characteristics of Magnesia

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Cultural Significance of Magnesia

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Geochemistry of Magnesia

Magnesium oxide Periclase or magnesia, a natural mineral of magnesium oxide

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Djurleite
Djurleite is a copper sulfide mineral of secondary origin with formula Cu31S16 that crystallizes with monoclinic-prismatic symmetry. It is typically massive in form, but does at times develop thin tabular to prismatic crystals. It occurs with other supergene minerals such as chalcocite, covellite and digenite in the enriched zone of copper orebodies. It is a member of the chalcocite group, and very similar to chalcocite, Cu2S, in its composition and properties, but the two minerals can be distinguished from each other by x-ray powder diffraction. Intergrowths and transformations between djurleite, digenite and chalcocite are common. Many of the reported associations of digenite and djurleite, however, identified by powder diffraction, could be anilite and djurleite, as anilite transforms to digenite during grinding. Djurleite was named for the Swedish chemist Seved Djurle (1928–2000), from the University of Uppsala, Sweden, who first synthesized the mineral in 1958, prior to its discovery in nature. The natural material was first described in 1962 by E H Roseboom Jr, of the US Geological Survey, from occurrences at the type locality, Barranca del Cobre, Chihuahua, Mexico.
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Hopeite
Hopeite is a hydrated zinc phosphate with formula: Zn3(PO4)2·4H2O. It is a rare mineral used mainly as a collectors specimen. Hopeite crystallizes in the orthorhombic system with prismatic, vitreous white to yellow crystals. It also forms druzy encrustations and reniform (kidney-shaped) masses. The related mineral parahopeite, which has the same composition but different crystal structure, is triclinic. The minerals are formed through oxidation of sphalerite by the presence of phosphate-rich solutions It was first described in 1822 from Moresnet, Liège Province, Belgium and is named after Scottish chemist, Thomas Charles Hope (1766–1844) of the University of Edinburgh. It has been found in Zambia associated with lazulite. Hopeite is one of the 2 conversion minerals arising from the application of the rust converter 'Fertan'.
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