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Carbonate mineral

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Minerals containing the carbonate ion
Calcite crystals from the Sweetwater Mine, Viburnum Trend District, Reynolds County, Missouri; 6.2 ×ばつ 6 ×ばつ 3.3 cm

Carbonate minerals are those minerals containing the carbonate ion, CO2−
3
.

Carbonate divisions

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Anhydrous carbonates

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Rhodochrosite, Sweet Home Mine, Alma, Colorado; 5.2 ×ばつ 4.2 ×ばつ 2.3 cm
Smithsonite, Silver Bill Mine, Dragoon Mts, Cochise County, Arizona; 4.8 ×ばつ 4.1 ×ばつ 2.4 cm

Anhydrous carbonates with compound formulas

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Dolomite with calcite and chalcopyrite from the Picher Field, Tri-State district, Cherokee County, Kansas; 12.0 ×ばつ 9.7 ×ばつ 4.3 cm

Carbonates with hydroxyl or halogen

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Azurite and malachite, Beaver Dam Mts, Washington County, Utah; 5.1 ×ばつ 3.9 ×ばつ 2.4 cm

Hydrated carbonates

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The carbonate class in both the Dana and the Strunz classification systems include the nitrates.[1] [2]

Nickel–Strunz classification -05- carbonates

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Hanksite, Na22K(SO4)9(CO3)2Cl, one of the few minerals that is considered a carbonate and a sulfate
Photomicrographs of a thin section containing carbonate vein in mica rich rock. In cross-polarized light on left, plane-polarized light on right.

IMA-CNMNC proposes a new hierarchical scheme (Mills et al., 2009).[3] This list uses the classification of Nickel–Strunz (mindat.org, 10 ed, pending publication).[2]

  • Abbreviations:
    • "*" – discredited (IMA/CNMNC status).
    • "?" – questionable/doubtful (IMA/CNMNC status).
    • "REE" – Rare-earth element (Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Pm, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu)
    • "PGE" – Platinum-group element (Ru, Rh, Pd, Os, Ir, Pt)
    • 03.C Aluminofluorides, 06 Borates, 08 Vanadates (04.H V[5,6] Vanadates), 09 Silicates:
      • Neso: insular (from Greek νησος nēsos, island)
      • Soro: grouping (from Greek σωροῦ sōros, heap, mound (especially of corn))
      • Cyclo: ring
      • Ino: chain (from Greek ις [genitive: ινος inos], fibre)
      • Phyllo: sheet (from Greek φύλλον phyllon, leaf)
      • Tekto: three-dimensional framework
  • Nickel–Strunz code scheme: NN.XY.##x
    • NN: Nickel–Strunz mineral class number
    • X: Nickel–Strunz mineral division letter
    • Y: Nickel–Strunz mineral family letter
    • ##x: Nickel–Strunz mineral/group number, x add-on letter

Class: carbonates

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References

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  1. ^ Dana Classification on Webmineral.
  2. ^ a b Strunz Classification on Webmineral.
  3. ^ Stuart J. Mills; Frédéric Hatert; Ernest H. Nickel; Giovanni Ferraris (2009). "The standardisation of mineral group hierarchies: application to recent nomenclature proposals" (PDF). Eur. J. Mineral. 21 (5): 1073–1080. Bibcode:2009EJMin..21.1073M. doi:10.1127/0935-1221/2009/0021-1994. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011年02月17日. Retrieved 2011年01月26日.
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"Special cases"
("native elements and organic minerals")
"Sulfides and oxides"
  • Sulfides (IDs 2.A–F)
  • Sulfosalts; sulfarsenites, sulfantimonites, sulfbismuthites (IDs 2.G)
  • Sulfosalts; sulfarsenates, sulfantimonates (IDs 2.K)
  • Other sulfosalts (IDs 2.H–J and 2.L–M)
  • Tellurium oxysalts
  • Vanadium oxides (IDs 4.H)
"Evaporites and similars"
"Mineral structures with tetrahedral units"
(sulfate anion, phosphate anion,
silicon, etc.)
  • Monomeric minerals (similar to nesosilicates)
  • Sulfates(VI) (IDs 7.A–E)
  • Thiosulphates (IDs 7.J)
  • Silicate frameworks, tectosilicates
  • Other tectosilicates (IDs 9.FA. and 9.FB.15, e.g. feldspars)
  • Other silicate frameworks
  • Inosilicates
  • Ribbon or multiple chain inosilicates (IDs 9.D, e.g. amphiboles)
  • Other non monomeric minerals
  • Unclassified silicates (IDs 9.H)

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