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  • Bücher  (183)
  • Mineralogie  (183)
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  • 1
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Chichester [u.a.] : Wiley & Sons
    Signatur: M 98.0219
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xv, 512 S.
    Ausgabe: 3., rev. and enlarged ed.
    ISBN: 047193819X
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 2
    Signatur: M 98.0488
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xii, 676 S.
    ISBN: 0521465168
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 3
    Signatur: 9/M 07.0421(350)
    In: Geological Society special publication
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: This volume brings together a collection of papers that summarize current ideas and recent progress in the study of granite-related mineralization systems. They provide a combination of field, experimental and theoretical studies. Papers are grouped according to the main granite-related ore systems: granite-pegmatite, skarn and greisen-veins, porphyry, orogenic gold, intrusion-related, epithermal and porphyry-related gold and base metal, iron oxide copper gold (IOCG), and special case studies. The studies provide a broad spread in terms of both space and time, highlighting granite-related ore deposits from Europe (Russia, Sweden, Croatia and Turkey), the Middle East (Iran), Asia (Japan and China) and South America (Brazil and Argentina) and spanning rocks from Palaeoproterozoic to Miocene in age.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 192 S. : Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 9781862393219
    Serie: Geological Society special publication 350
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 4
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Berlin [u.a.] : Springer
    Signatur: 11/M 15.0093
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XVII, 502 S. : graph. Darst
    Ausgabe: [1., ed., softcover version of original hardcover ed. 2001]
    ISBN: 9783642085857
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 5
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Stuttgart : Enke
    Signatur: 11/M 94.0217 ; M 92.0295 ; AWI G1-92-0385
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Inhalt: 1 Tone und Tongesteine. - 2 Aufbau und Strukturprinzipien der silicatischen Tonminerale. - 3 Systematik der Tonmineralstrukturen. - 4 Tonmineralneubildung und ihre Voraussetzungen. - 5 Spezielle Tonmineralogie. - 6 Spezielle Eigenschaften der silicatischen Tonkomponenten. - 7 Tonminerale in einer anthropogen veränderten Umwelt. - 8 Hinweise zur mineralogischen Untersuchung von Tongesteinen. - Anhang: Zusammensetzung und Eigenschaften wichtiger Tonminerale. - Anmerkungen. - Literatur. - Sachregister
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Die Tonminerale gehören u. a. wegen ihrer hohen Reaktionsempfindlichkeit gegenüber Milieuveränderungen zu den eigentümlichsten Erscheinungen unserer anorganischen Welt. Sie nehmen in einigen Bereichen der gegenwärtigen Umweltproblematik geradezu (nicht immer klar erkannte) Schlüsselpositionen ein - so z. B. bei den Waldschäden. So wurde in diesem Buch versucht, nach einleitenden Betrachtungen zur Verbreitung und Genese von Tongesteinen und neben einer zusammenfassenden Darstellung der heutigen Tonmineralogie, vor allem das Verhalten der Tone und Tonminerale durch Ableitung von ihren Struktureigenschaften auch einem breiteren Interessentenkreis verständlich zu machen.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: IX, 157 S.
    ISBN: 3432987412
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: AWI Bibliothek
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  • 6
    Signatur: 92.1334
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: X, 193 S. : Ill. ; 1 Anhang
    Ausgabe: 4., überarb. Aufl.
    ISBN: 3528383240
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 7
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Boulder, Colo. : The Geological Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 9/S 90.0095(421)
    In: Special paper
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: vi, 242 S.
    ISBN: 9780813724218 , 0-8137-2421-X
    Serie: Special paper / Geological Society of America (GSA) 421
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 8
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    London [u.a.] : Chapman & Hall
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 97.0326
    In: The Mineralogical Society series
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: viii, 369 S.
    ISBN: 0412563401
    Serie: Mineralogical Society series 5
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 9
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    London : The Geological Society
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 9/M 07.0421(302)
    In: Geological Society special publication
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 227 S.
    ISBN: 9781862392564
    Serie: Geological Society special publication 302
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 10
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Warszawa : Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe
    Signatur: M 97.0385 ; G 8424
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 414 S. : Ill., graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 8301004142
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Unbestimmte Sprache
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 11
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Zürich : Trans Tech Publications
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: M 97.0054/2
    In: Grain growth in polycrystalline materials
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: S. 468 - 913
    Serie: Materials science forum 94/96, 2
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 12
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    London : The Geological Society
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 98.0373 ; M 98.0299
    In: Rock-forming minerals
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XII, 764 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed
    ISBN: 1897799772
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 13
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Chantilly, Va. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 07.0317
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Fluids rich in water, carbon and sulfur species and a variety of dissolved salts are a ubiquitous transport medium for heat and matter in the Earth’s interior. Fluid transport through the upper mantle and crust controls the origin of magmatism above subduction zones and results in natural risks of explosive volcanism. Fluids passing through rocks affect the chemical and heat budget of the global oceans, and can be utilized as a source of geothermal energy on land. Fluid transport is a key to the formation and the practical utilization of natural resources, from the origin of hydrothermal mineral deposits, through the exploitation of gaseous and liquid hydrocarbons as sources of energy and essential raw materials, to the subsurface storage of waste materials such as CO2. Different sources of fluids and variable paths of recycling volatile components from the hydrosphere and atmosphere through the solid interior of the Earth lead to a broad range of fluid compositions, from aqueous liquids and gases through water-rich silicate or salt melts to carbon-rich endmember compositions. Different rock regimes in the crust and mantle generate characteristic ranges of fluid composition, which depending on pressure, temperature and composition are miscible to greatly variable degrees. For example, aqueous liquids and vapors are increasingly miscible at elevated pressure and temperature. The degree of this miscibility is, however, greatly influenced by the presence of additional carbonic or salt components. A wide range of fluid–fluid interactions results from this partial miscibility of crustal fluids. Vastly different chemical and physical properties of variably miscible fluids, combined with fluid flow from one pressure – temperature regime to another, therefore have major consequences for the chemical and physical evolution of the crust and mantle. Several recent textbooks and review articles have addressed the role and diverse aspects of fluids in crustal processes. However, immiscibility of fluids and the associated phenomena of m ultiphase fluid flow are generally dealt with only in subsections with respect to specific environments and aspects of fluid mediated processes. This volume of Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry attempts to fill this gap and to explicitly focus on the role that co-existing fluids play in the diverse geologic environments. It brings together the previously somewhat detached literature on fluid–fluid interactions in continental, volcanic, submarine and subduction zone environments. It emphasizes that fluid mixing and unmixing are widespread processes that may occur in all geologic environments of the entire crust and upper mantle. Despite different P-T conditions, the fundamental processes are analogous in the different settings.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xii, 430 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-77-4 , 978-0-939950-77-5
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 65
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Fluid–Fluid Interactions in the Earth’s Lithosphere by Axel Liebscher and Christoph A. Heinrich, p. 1 - 14 Chapter 2. Experimental Studies in Model Fluid Systems by Axel Liebscher, p. 15 - 48 Chapter 3. Equations of State for Complex Fluids by Matthias Gottschalk, p. 49 - 98 Chapter 4. Liquid Immiscibility in Silicate Melts and Related Systems by Alan B. Thompson, Maarten Aerts, and Alistair C. Hack, p. 99 - 128 Chapter 5. Phase Relations Involving Hydrous Silicate Melts, Aqueous Fluids, and Minerals by Alistair C. Hack, Alan B. Thompson, and Maarten Aerts, p. 129 - 186 Chapter 6. Numerical Simulation of Multiphase Fluid Flow in Hydrothermal Systems by Thomas Driesner and Sebastian Geiger, p. 187 - 212 Chapter 7. Fluid Phase Separation Processes in Submarine Hydrothermal Systems by Dionysis I. Foustoukos and William E. Seyfried, Jr., p. 213 - 240 Chapter 8. Fluids in Hydrocarbon Basins by Karen S. Pedersen and Peter L. Christensen, p. 241 - 258 Chapter 9. Fluid-Fluid Interactions in Geothermal Systems by Stefan Arnorsson and Andri Stefansson, Jon Orn Bjarnason, p. 259 - 312 Chapter 10. Fluid Immiscibility in Volcanic Environment by James D. Webster and Charles W. Mandeville, p. 313 - 362 Chapter 11. Fluid-Fluid Interactions in Magmatic-Hydrothermal Ore Formation by Christoph A. Heinrich, p. 363 - 388 Chapter 12. Fluid Immiscibility in Metamorphic Rocks by Wilhelm Heinrich, p. 389 - 430
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 14
    Signatur: 11/M 08.0289
    In: Short course series
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: ix, 158 S. , Ill.
    ISBN: 9780921294467
    Serie: Short course series / Mineralogical Association of Canada 38
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 15
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Ottawa : Mineralogical Association of Canada
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 08.0291
    In: The Canadian mineralogist
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xx, 347 S. + 1 CD-ROM
    ISBN: 9780921294474
    Serie: The Canadian mineralogist : Special publication 10
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 16
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Ottawa : Mineralogical Association of Canada
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 08.0292
    In: The Canadian mineralogist
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xv, 371 S.
    ISBN: 9780660197876
    Serie: The Canadian mineralogist : Special publication 9
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 17
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Ottawa, Ontario : Mineralogical Association of Canada
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 07.0137
    In: Short course series
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: vi, 374 S. : Ill., graph. Darst. + 1 CD-ROM
    ISBN: 0921294328
    Serie: Short course series / Mineralogical Association of Canada 32
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 18
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    London [u.a.] : Longman
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 94.0299 ; M 93.0253
    In: Rock-forming minerals
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 919 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed
    ISBN: 0582465265
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 19
    facet.materialart.
    Unbekannt
    Karlsruhe : FIZ [u.a.]
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: NBM 97.001
    In: Inorganic crystal structure database [Computerdatei]
    Seiten: CD-ROM
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 20
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Zürich : Trans Tech Publications
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: M 97.0054/1
    In: Grain growth in polycrystalline materials
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 466 S.
    ISBN: 0878496408
    Serie: Material science forum 94/96, 1
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 21
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 93.0253/2
    In: Rock-forming minerals
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 668 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 0582465222
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 22
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Essex : Longman Scientific & Technical
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: M 94.0669 ; 11/M 94.0300 ; M 93.0253/1
    In: Rock-forming minerals
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 629 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 0582465214
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 23
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    London : The Geological Society
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 9/M 07.0421(293)
    In: Geological Society special publication
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 361 S.
    ISBN: 9781862392427
    Serie: Geological Society special publication 293
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 24
    Signatur: 11/M 08.0290
    In: Short course series
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xvi, 348 S. + 1 CD-ROM
    ISBN: 9780921294498
    Serie: Short course series / Mineralogical Association of Canada 40
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 25
    Signatur: 11/M 18.91329
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: With the ever increasing spatial resolution in the characterization of microstructures, textures and chemical as well as isotopic patterns and the continuously improving sensitivity and precision in mineral chemical and isotopic analysis, increasing evidence has emerged indicating that phase relations in rocks from high-temperature environments may be modified during exhumation and cooling and that the original equilibrium phase relations may not have been preserved or that equilibrium may never have been attained fully even at high temperatures. This volume accompanies an EMU School intended bring contemporary research on mineral reaction kinetics to the attention of young researchers and to put it into the context of recent developments in related disciplines. The school and the accompanying volume cannot give a comprehensive review of the current state of geomaterials research. Rather a selection of topics, methods and concepts, which the contributors deem currently most relevant and instructive, is presented. The aim is to provide a methodologically sound insight into the theoretical foundations of mineral reaction kinetics, to help students to become acquainted with contemporary methods in experimentation and analytical techniques, and to give worked examples that illustrate recent advances in geoscience based on an improved characterization and understanding of mineral and rock systems.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xv, 651 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme
    ISBN: 9780903056632
    Serie: European Mineralogical Union notes in mineralogy volume 16
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 26
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 96.0480
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: At the time of the first printing (1996), interest in the element boron was growing rapidly. We felt that it was an opportune moment to ask investigators active in research on boron to review developments in their respective fields so that readers could learn what was-and wasn't-known about boron and its minerals, geochemistry and petrology. Since 1996, interest in boron has, if anything, increased, and continued demand for the Reviews in Mineralogy "boron bible" has motivated the Mineralogical Society of America to reprint the volume. Demand is reflected in citations, and according to ISI's Science Citation Index, the number of citations since publication to the volume is about 380, with some individual chapters having been cited as many as 44 times. In preparation for this printing, authors of 15 of the 19 original chapters have updated, corrected or added to their chapters within the constraints that no pages be added. Most addenda are bibliographies of literature published since 1996; a few also include summaries of significant findings. Addenda for each chapter follow the chapter, except for those for Chapters 1 and 2, which are merged onto pages 115-116 and 385. A table of new B-minerals since 1996 is given on p. 28, and many modifications were made to the table (p. 7-27) of B-minerals known prior to 1996 (corrections to formulae, mineral names, localities, etc.). Similar up-datings of Table 1 (p. 223) in Chapter 5 and numerous tables in Chapter 9 (p. 387) were undertaken, and Figure 15 in Chapter 11 (p. 619), which-embarrassingly-was missing from the first printing, has been supplied. Addenda to Chapter 13 are introduced on p. 744 and completed on p. 863 and 864. The following salient developments in research related to B are mentioned in the addenda: New minerals. Twenty-two boron minerals have been or are about to be described, and four more have been approved by the International Mineralogical Association, representing an increase of 10%, comparable to the increase in the number of all new minerals described during the same period (Anovitz and Grew, Chapter 1) Tourmaline group. In addition to four new tourmaline species, a new classification has been proposed. Another tourmaline, olenite, has been shown to contain substantial amounts of excess B in tetrahedral coordination, a finding that has revolutionized our view of tourmaline crystal chemistry (Werding and Schreyer, Chapter 3; references in addendum to Henry and Dutrow, Chapter 10). Boron isotopes. New techniques for measuring isotope ratios using secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS) with the ion microprobe open up new opportunities for in situ analyses of individual grains and fluid inclusions (Hervig, Chapter 16). Boron isotopes have found applications in paleoceanography and thus add to the tools available for the study of past climates (Palmer and Swihart, Chapter 13). One of the major questions facing the use of hydrogeochemical models is whether or not they can be used with confidence to predict future evolution of groundwater systems. There is much controversy concerning the validity and uncertainties of non-reactive fluid flow systems. Adding chemical interaction to these flow models only confounds the problem. Although such models may accurately integrate the governing physical and chemical equations, many uncertainties are inherent in characterizing the natural system itself. These systems are inherently heterogeneous on a variety of scales rendering it impossible to know precisely the many details of the flow system and chemical composition of the host rock. Other properties of natural systems such as permeability and mineral surface area, to name just two, may never be known with any great precision, and in fact may be unknowable. Because of these uncertainties, it remains an open question as to what extent numerical models of groundwater flow and reactive transport wilI be useful in making accurate quantitative predictions. Nevertheless, reactive transport models should be able to predict the outcome for the particular representation of the porous medium used in the model. Finally, it should be mentioned that numerical models are often our only recourse to analyze such environmental problems as safe disposal of nuclear waste where predictions must be carried out over geologic time spans. Without such models it would be impossible to analyze such systems, because they involve times too long to perform laboratory experiments. The results of model calculations may affect important political decisions that must be made. Therefore, it is all the more important that models be applied and tested in diverse environments so that confidence and understanding of the limitations and strengths of model predictions are understood before irreversible decisions are made that could adversely affect generations to come.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xx, 862 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-41-3 , 978-0-939950-41-6
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy 33
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Mineralogy, Petrology and Geochemistry of Boron: An Introduction by Lawrence M. Anovitz and Edward S. Grew, p. 1 - 40 Chapter 2. The Crystal Chemistry of Boron by Frank C. Hawthorne, Peter C. Burns, and Joel D. Grice, p. 41 - 116 Chapter 3. Experimental Studies on Borosilicates and Selected Borates by G. Werding and Werner Schreyer, p. 117 - 164 Chapter 4. Thermochemistry of Borosilicate Melts and Glasses - from Pyrex to Pegmatites by Alexandra Navrotsky, p. 165 - 180 Chapter 5. Thermodynamics of Boron Minerals: Summary of Structural, Volumetric and Thermochemical Data by Lawrence M. Anovitz and Bruce S. Hemingway, p. 181 - 262 Chapter 6. Continental Borate Deposits of Cenozoic Age by George I. Smith and Marjorie D. Medrano, p. 263 - 298 Chapter 7. Boron in Granitic Rocks and Their Contact Aureoles by David London, George B. Morgan, VI, and Michael B. Wolf, p. 299 - 330 Chapter 8. Experimental Studies of Boron in Granitic Melts by Donald B. Dingwell, Michel Pichavant, and François Holtz, p. 331 - 386 Chapter 9. Borosilicates (Exclusive of Tourmaline) and Boron in Rock-forming Minerals in Metamorphic Environments by Edward S. Grew, p. 387 - 502 Chapter 10. Metamorphic Tourmaline and Its Petrologic Applications by Darrell J. Henry and Barbara L. Dutrow, p. 503 - 558 Chapter 11. Tourmaline Associations with Hydrothermal Ore Deposits by John F. Slack, p. 559 - 644 Chapter 12. Geochemistry of Boron and Its Implications for Crustal and Mantle Processes by William P. Leeman and Virginia B. Sisson, p. 645 - 708 Chapter 13. Boron Isotope Geochemistry: An Overview by Martin R. Palmer and George H. Swihart, p. 709 - 744 Chapter 14. Similarities and Contrasts in Lunar and Terrestrial Boron Geochemistry by Denis M. Shaw, p. 745 - 770 Chapter 15. Electron Probe Microanalysis of Geologic Materials for Boron by James J. McGee and Lawrence M. Anovitz, p. 771 - 788 Chapter 16. Analyses of Geological Materials for Boron by Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry by Richard L. Hervig, p. 789 - 804 Chapter 17. Nuclear Methods for Analysis of Boron in Minerals by J. David Robertson and M. Darby Dyar, p. 805 - 820 Chapter 18. Parallel Electron Energy-loss Spectroscopy of Boron in Minerals by Laurence A. J. Garvie and Peter R. Buseck, p. 821 - 844 Chapter 19. Instrumental Techniques for Boron Isotope Analysis by George H. Swihart, p. 845 - 862
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  • 27
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 96.0543
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: This volume contains the contributions presented at a short course held in Golden, Colorado, October 25-27, 1996 in conjunction with the Mineralogical Society of America's (MSA) Annual Meeting with the Geological Society of America in Denver, Colorado. The field of reactive transport within the Earth Sciences is a highly multidisciplinary area of research. The field encompasses a number of diverse disciplines including geochemistry, geology, physics, chemistry, hydrology, and engineering. The literature on the subject is similarly spread out as can be seen by a perusal of the bibliographies at the end of the chapters in this volume. Because these distinct disciplines have evolved largely independently of one another, their respective treatments of reactive transport in the Earth Sciences are based on different terminologies, assumptions, and levels of mathematical rigor. This volume and the short course which accompanies it, is an attempt to some extent bridge the gap between these different disciplines by bringing together authors and students from different backgrounds. A wide variety of geochemical processes including such diverse phenomena as the transport of radiogenic and toxic waste products, diagenesis, hydrothermal ore deposit formation, and metamorphism are the result of reactive transport in the subsurface. Such systems can be viewed as open bio-geochemical reactors where chemical change is driven by the interactions between migrating fluids, solid phases, and organisms. The evolution of these systems involves diverse processes including fluid flow, chemical reaction, and solute transport, each with differing characteristic time scales. This volume focuses on methods to describe the extent and consequences of reactive flow and transport in natural subsurface systems. Our ability to quantify reactive transport in natural systems has advanced dramatically over the past decade. Much of this advance is due to the exponential increase in computer computational power over the past generation-geochemical calculations that took years to perform in 1970 can be performed in seconds in 1996. Taking advantage of this increase of computational power, numerous comprehensive reactive transport models have been developed and applied to natural phenomena. These models can be used either qualitatively or qualitatively to provide insight into natural phenomena. Quantitative models force the investigator to validate or invalidate ideas by putting real numbers into an often vague hypothesis and thereby starting the thought process along a path that may result in acceptance, rejection, or modification of the original hypothesis. Used qualitatively, models provide. insight into the general features of a particular phenomenon, rather than specific details. One of the major questions facing the use of hydrogeochemical models is whether or not they can be used with confidence to predict future evolution of groundwater systems. There is much controversy concerning the validity and uncertainties of non-reactive fluid flow systems. Adding chemical interaction to these flow models only confounds the problem. Although such models may accurately integrate the governing physical and chemical equations, many uncertainties are inherent in characterizing the natural system itself. These systems are inherently heterogeneous on a variety of scales rendering it impossible to know precisely the many details of the flow system and chemical composition of the host rock. Other properties of natural systems such as permeability and mineral surface area, to name just two, may never be known with any great precision, and in fact may be unknowable. Because of these uncertainties, it remains an open question as to what extent numerical models of groundwater flow and reactive transport wilI be useful in making accurate quantitative predictions. Nevertheless, reactive transport models should be able to predict the outcome for the particular representation of the porous medium used in the model. Finally, it should be mentioned that numerical models are often our only recourse to analyze such environmental problems as safe disposal of nuclear waste where predictions must be carried out over geologic time spans. Without such models it would be impossible to analyze such systems, because they involve times too long to perform laboratory experiments. The results of model calculations may affect important political decisions that must be made. Therefore, it is all the more important that models be applied and tested in diverse environments so that confidence and understanding of the limitations and strengths of model predictions are understood before irreversible decisions are made that could adversely affect generations to come.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xiii, 438 S.
    ISBN: 0939950421 , 0-939950-45-6 , 978-0-939950-45-4
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy 34
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Continuum Formulation of Multicomponent-Multiphase Reactive Transport by Peter C. Lichtner, p. 1 - 82 Chapter 2. Approaches to Modeling of Reactive Transport in Porous Media by Carl I. Steefel and Kerry T. B. MacQuarrie, p. 83 - 130 Chapter 3. Physical and Chemical Properties of Rocks and Fluids for Chemical Mass Transport Calculations by Eric H. Oelkers, p. 131 - 192 Chapter 4. Multicomponent Ion Exchange and Chromatography in Natural Systems by C. A. J. Appelo, p. 193 - 228 Chapter 5. Solute Transport Modeling Under Variably Saturated Water Flow Conditions by Donald L. Suarez and J. Simunek, p. 229 - 268 Chapter 6. Reactive Transport in Heterogeneous Systems: An Overview by Andrew F. B. Tompson and Kenneth J. Jackson, p. 269 - 310 Chapter 7. Microbiological Processes in Reactive Modeling by Bruce E. Rittmann and Jeanne M. VanBriesen, p. 311 - 334 Chapter 8. Biogeochemical Dynamics in Aquatic Sediments by Philippe Van Cappellen and Jean-Francois Gaillard, p. 335 - 376 Chapter 9. Reactive Transport Modeling of Acidic Metal-Contaminated Ground Water at a Site with Sparse Spatial Information by Pierre Glynn and James Brown, p. 377 - 438
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  • 28
    Signatur: S 00.0053(18)
    In: Schriften des Museums für Mineralogie und Geologie Dresden
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: 200 S.
    ISBN: 9783910006478
    Serie: Schriften des Museums für Mineralogie und Geologie Dresden 18
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin unten
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  • 29
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    St. John's Newfoundland : Geological Association of Canada
    Signatur: M 95.0098
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: VII, 299 S.
    Ausgabe: reprinted, Nov. 1990
    ISBN: 0919216390
    Serie: Geological Association of Canada short course notes , vol. 6
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 30
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    New York : Van Nostrand Reinhold Comp.
    Signatur: M 95.0059
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xiii, 300 S.
    ISBN: 0442218575
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 31
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    Berlin : Selbstverl. Fachbereich Geowissenschaften
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    Signatur: S 90.0061(157)
    In: Berliner geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: 140 S.
    ISBN: 3927541788
    ISSN: 0172-8784
    Serie: Berliner geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen : Reihe A, Geologie und Paläontologie 157
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin unten
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  • 32
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Rotterdam : Balkema
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 94.0595/1
    In: Rock at great depth
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XXI, 504 S.
    ISBN: 9061919738
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 33
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Chantilly, Va. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 05.0596(58)
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: The publication of this volume occurs at the one-hundredth anniversary of 1905, which has been called the annus mirabilus because it was the year of a number of enormous scientific advances. Among them are four papers by Albert Einstein explaining (among other things) Brownian motion, the photoelectric effect, the special theory of relativity, and the equation E = mc2. Also of significance in 1905 was the first application of another major advance in physics, which dramatically changed the fields of Earth and planetary science. In March of 1905 (and published the following year), Ernest Rutherford presented the following in the Silliman Lectures at Yale: "The helium observed in the radioactive minerals is almost certainly due to its production from the radium and other radioactive substances contained therein. If the rate of production of helium from known weights of the different radioelements were experimentally known, it should thus be possible to determine the interval required for the production of the amount of helium observed in radioactive minerals, or, in other words, to determine the age of the mineral." Rutherford E (1906) Radioactive Transformations. Charles Scriber's Sons, NY Thus radioisotopic geochronology was born, almost immediately shattering centuries of speculative conjectures and estimates and laying the foundation for establishment of the geologic timescale, the age of the Earth and meteorites, and a quantitative understanding of the rates of processes ranging from nebular condensation to Quaternary glaciations. There is an important subplot to the historical development of radioisotopic dating over the last hundred years, which, ironically, arises directly from the subsequent history of the U-He dating method Rutherford described in 1905. Almost as soon as radioisotopic dating was invented, it was recognized that the U-He [or later the (U-Th)/He method], provided ages that were often far younger than those allowed by stratigraphic correlations or other techniques such as U/Pb dating. Clearly, as R.J. Strutt noted in 1910, He ages only provided "minimum values, because helium leaks out from the mineral, to what extent it is impossible to say" (Strutt, 1910, Proc Roy Soc Lond, Ser A 84:379-388). For several decades most attention was diverted to U/Pb and other techniques better suited to measurement of crystallization ages and establishment of the geologic timescale. Gradually it became clear that other radioisotopic systems such as K/Ar and later fission-track also provided ages that were clearly younger than formation ages. In 1910 it may have been impossible to say the extent to which He (or most other elements) leaked out of minerals, but eventually a growing understanding of thermally-activated diffusion and annealing began to shed light on the significance of such ages. The recognition that some systems can provide cooling, rather than formation, ages, was gradual and diachronous across radioisotopic systems. Most of the heavy lifting in this regard was accomplished by researchers working on the interpretation of K/Ar and fission-track ages. Ironically, Rutherfordπs He-based radioisotopic system was one of the last to be quantitatively interpreted as a thermochronometer, and has been added to K/Ar (including 40Ar/39Ar) and fission-track methods as important for constraining the medium- to low-temperature thermal histories of rocks and minerals. Thermochronology has had a slow and sometimes fitful maturation from what were once troubling age discrepancies and poorly-understood open-system behaviors, into a powerful branch of geochronology applied by Earth scientists from diverse fields. Cooling ages, coupled with quantitative understanding of crystal-scale kinetic phenomena and crustal- or landscape-scale interpretational models now provide an enormous range of insights into tectonics, geomorphology, and subjects of other fields. At the same time, blossoming of lower temperature thermochronometric approaches has inspired new perspectives into the detailed behavior of higher temperature systems that previously may have been primarily used for establishing formation ages. Increased recognition of the importance of thermal histories, combined with improved analytical precision, has motivated progress in understanding the thermochronologic behavior of U/Pb, Sm/Nd, Lu/Hf, and other systems in a wide range of minerals, filling out the temperature range accessible by thermochronologic approaches. Thus the maturation of low- and medium-temperature thermochronology has led to a fuller understanding of the significance of radioisotopic ages in general, and to one degree or another has permeated most of geochronology. Except in rare cases, the goal of thermochronology is not thermal histories themselves, but rather the geologic processes responsible for them. Thermochronometers are now routinely used for quantifying exhumation histories (tectonic or erosional), magmatism, or landscape evolution. As thermochronology has matured, so have model and interpretational approaches used to convert thermal histories into these more useful geologic histories. Low-temperature thermochronology has been especially important in this regard, as knowledge of thermal processes in the uppermost few kilometers of the crust require consideration of coupled interactions of tectonic, geodynamic, and surface processes. Exciting new developments in these fields in turn drive improved thermochronologic methods and innovative sampling approaches. The chapters This volume presents 22 chapters covering many of the important modern aspects of thermochronology. The coverage of the chapters ranges widely, including historical perspective, analytical techniques, kinetics and calibrations, modeling approaches, and interpretational methods. In general, the chapters focus on intermediate- to low-temperature thermochronometry, though some chapters cover higher temperature methods such as monazite U/Pb closure profiles, and the same theory and approaches used in low-temperature thermochronometry are generally applicable to higher temperature systems. The widely used low- to medium-temperature thermochronometric systems are reviewed in detail in these chapters, but while there are numerous chapters reviewing various aspects of the apatite (U-Th)/He system, there is no chapter singularly devoted to it, partly because of several previous reviews recently published on this topic. Chapter 1 by Reiners, Ehlers, and Zeitler provides a perspective on the history of thermochronology, comments on modern work in this field and general lessons on the potential for noise to be turned into signal. This chapter also provides a summary of the current challenges, unresolved issues, and most exciting prospects in the field. Much of the modern understanding of kinetic controls on apparent ages, thermal histories, and sampling approaches comes from decades of progress in fission-track dating, a method that remains as essential as ever, partly because of the power of track-length measurements and the depth of (at least empirical) understanding of the kinetics of track annealing. Tagami, Donelick and OπSullivan review the fundamentals of modern fission-track dating (Chapter 2). Two of the most commonly dated, well-understood, and powerful minerals dated by fission-track methods are apatite and zircon, and the specifics of modern methods for these systems and their kinetics are reviewed by Donelick, OπSullivan, and Ketcham (Chapter 3), and Tagami (Chapter 4). Although 40Ar/39Ar and (U-Th)/He dating methods followed somewhat different paths to their modern thermochronologic incarnations, they have many features in common, especially in the kinetics of diffusion and closure. Zeitler and Harrison review the concepts underlying both 40Ar/39Ar and (U-Th)/He methods (Chapter 5). Zircon was one of the first minerals dated by the (U-Th)/He method, but has only just begun to be used for thermochronometry of both bedrock and detrital samples, as reviewed by Reiners (Chapter 6). Continuous time-temperature paths from intracrystalline variations of radiogenic Ar proven perhaps the most powerful of all thermochronologic approaches, and an innovative analogous approach in He dating (4He/3He thermochronometry) is revealing remarkably powerful constraints on the extreme low temperature end of thermal histories, as reviewed by Shuster and Farley (Chapter 7). Thermochronology of detrital minerals provides unique constraints on the long-term evolution of orogens, sediment provenance, and depositional age constraints, to name a few. Bernet and Garver (Chapter 8) review the essentials of detrital zircon fission-track dating, one of the most venerable and robust of detrital thermochronometers, and in Chapter 9, Hodges, Ruhl, Wobus, and Pringle review the use of 40Ar/39Ar dating of detrital minerals, demonstrating the power of detrital muscovite ages in illuminating variations in exhumation rates in catchments over broad landscapes. (U-Th)/He thermochronometry presents several unique interpretational challenges besides new kinetics and low temperature sensitivity. One of these is long-alpha stopping distances, and its coupling with diffusion and U-Th zonation in age corrections. Dunai reviews modeling approaches to deal with these issues in interpreting low-temperature thermal histories (Chapter 10). Ketcham (Chapter 11) reviews the theory and calibration of both forward and inverse models of thermal histories from fission-track and (U-Th)/He data, and makes some important points about the interpretations of such models. Translating thermal histories into exhumational histories and their tectonic or geomorphic significance across a landscape requires quantitative understanding of the thermal structure of the crust and how it is perturbed, a review of which is presented by Ehlers (Chapter 12). Braun (Chapter 13) illustrates the power of low-temperature thermochronometry to constrain topographic evolution of landscapes over time, using PECUBE. Gallagher, Stephenson, Brown, Holmes, and Ballester present a novel method of inverse modeling of fission-track and (U-Th)/He data for thermal histories over landscapes (Chapter 14). Continuous time-temperature paths from closure profiles or their step-heating-derived equivalents are, to some degree, the holy grail of thermochronology. Harrison, Zeitler, Grove, and Lovera (Chapter 15) provide a review of the theory, measurement, and interpretation of continuous thermal histories at both intermediate and high temperatures, derived from both K-feldspar 40Ar/39Ar and monazite U/Pb dating. Extensional orogens provide a special challenge and opportunity for thermochronometry because tectonic exhumation by footwall unroofing often outstrips erosional exhumation, and often occurs at high rates. As Stockli shows (Chapter 16) thermochronology in these setting provides opportunities to measure rates of a number of important processes, as well as obtain a snapshot of crustal thermal structure and its imprint on thermochronometers with varying closure temperatures. Spotila (Chapter 17) reviews the use of thermochronology applied to tectonic geomorphology in a wide range of orogenic settings, introducing the concept of denudational maturity. Thermochronology has found great utility in economic geology, and newly developed approaches pose great potential in this area, and shown by McInnes, Evans, Fu, and Garwin in their review of the use and modeling of thermochronology of hydrothermal ore deposits (Chapter 18). The thermal histories of sedimentary basins are also critical to understanding thermal maturation of hydrocarbons, but are also critical for understanding basin formation, erosional histories of source regions, fluid flow, and climate change and other temporal signals preserved in sedimentary rocks. Armstrong (Chapter 19) reviews these issues and the use of thermochronology in deducing the thermal histories of sedimentary basins. Drawing on large datasets of bedrock apatite fission-track dates, Kohn, Gleadow, Brown, Gallagher, Lorencak, and Noble demonstrate the power of modeling, and, importantly, effectively visualizing, integrated thermotectonic and denudational histories over large regions (Chapter 20). Thermal histories of meteorites provide constraints on a wide range of fundamentally important processes, including nebular condensation and early solar-system metamorphic histories, and the dynamics of interplanetary collisions and shock metamorphism. Min reviews thermochronologic approaches to understanding meteorite thermal histories (Chapter 21), including new methods and approaches. Finally, the importance of robust models with which to interpret thermochronologic data is underscored by the review of the Software for Interpretation and Analysis of Thermochronologic Data (Chapter 22), summarized and compiled by Ehlers, for programs associated with the work of authors in this volume and others.
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: XXII, 622 S. , Ill., graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 0-939950-70-7 , 978-0-939950-70-6
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 58
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Past, present, and future of thermochronology by Peter W. Reiners, Todd A. Ehlers, and Peter K. Zeitler, p. 1 - 18 Chapter 2. Fundamentals of fission-track thermochronology by Takahiro Tagami, Paul B. OπSullivan, p. 19 - 48 Chapter 3. Apatite fission-track analysis by Raymond A. Donelick, Paul B. O'Sullivan, and Richard A. Ketcham, p. 49 - 94 Chapter 4. Zircon fission-track thermochronology and applications to fault studies by Takahiro Tagami, p. 95 - 122 Chapter 5. Fundamentals of noble gas thermochronometry by T. Mark Harrison and Peter K. Zeitler, p. 123 - 150 Chapter 6. Zircon (U-Th)/He thermochronometry by Peter W. Reiners, p. 151 - 180 Chapter 7. 4He/3He thermochronometry: theory, practice, and potential complications by David L. Shuster and Kenneth A. Farley, p. 181 - 204 Chapter 8. Fission-track analysis of detrital zircon by Matthias Bernet and John I. Garver, p. 205 - 238 Chapter 9. 40Ar/39Ar thermochronology of detrital minerals by Kip V. Hodges, Katherine Watson Ruhl, C.W. Wobus, and M.S. Pringle, p. 239 - 258 Chapter 10. Forward modeling and interpretation of (U-Th)/He ages by Tibor J. Dunai, p. 259 - 274 Chapter 11. Forward and inverse modeling of low-temperature thermochronometry data by Richard A. Ketcham, p. 275 - 314 Chapter 12. Crustal thermal processes and the interpretation of thermochronometer data by Todd A. Ehlers, p. 315 - 350 Chapter 13. Quantitative constraints on the rate of landform evolution derived from low-temperature thermochronology by Jean Braun, p. 351 - 374 Chapter 14. Exploiting 3D spatial sampling in inverse modeling of thermochronological data by Kerry Gallagher, John Stephenson, Roderick Brown, Chris Holmes, and Pedro Ballester, p. 375 - 388 Chapter 15. Continuous thermal histories from inversion of closure profiles by T. Mark Harrison, Marty Grove, Oscar M. Lovera, and Peter K. Zeitler, p. 389 - 410 Chapter 16. Application of low-temperature thermochronometry to extensional tectonic settings by Daniel F. Stockli, p. 411 - 448 Chapter 17. Applications of low-temperature thermochronometry to quantification of recent exhumation in mountain belts by James Spotila, p. 449 - 466 Chapter 18. Application of thermochronology to hydrothermal ore deposits by Brent I. A. McInnes, Noreen J. Evans, Frank Q. Fu, and Steve Garwin, p. 467 - 498 Chapter 19. Thermochronometers in sedimentary basins by Phillip A. Armstrong, p. 499 - 526 Chapter 20. Visualizing thermotectonic and denudation histories using apatite fission track thermochronology by Barry P. Kohn, Andrew J.W. Gleadow, Roderick W. Brown, Kerry Gallagher, Matevz Lorencak, and Wayne P. Noble, p. 527 - 566 Chapter 21. Low-temperature thermochronometry of meteorites by Kyoungwon Min, p. 567 - 588 Chapter 22. Computational tools for low-temperature thermochronometer interpretation by Todd A. Ehlers, Tehmasp Chaudhri, Santosh Kumar, Chris W. Fuller, Sean D. Willett, Richard A. Ketcham, Mark T. Brandon, David X. Belton, Barry P. Kohn, Andrew J.W. Gleadow, Tibor J. Dunai, and Frank Q. Fu, p. 589 - 622
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  • 34
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Chantilly, Va. : Mineralogical Society of America
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    Signatur: 11/M 06.0469
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: The importance of sulfide minerals in ores has long been, and continues to be, a major reason for the interest of mineralogists and geochemists in these materials. Determining the fundamental chemistry of sulfides is key to understanding their conditions of formation and, hence, the geological processes by which certain ore deposits have formed. This, in turn, may inform the strategies used in exploration for such deposits and their subsequent exploitation. In this context, knowledge of structures, stabilities, phase relations and transformations, together with the relevant thermodynamic and kinetic data, is critical. As with many geochemical systems, much can also be learned from isotopic studies. The practical contributions of mineralogists and geochemists to sulfide studies extend beyond areas related to geological applications. The mining of sulfide ores, to satisfy ever increasing world demand for metals, now involves extracting very large volumes of rock that contains a few percent at most (and commonly less than one percent) of the metal being mined. This is true of relatively low value metals such as copper; for the precious metals commonly occurring as sulfides, or associated with them, the mineable concentrations (grades) are very much lower. The "as-mined" ores therefore require extensive processing in order to produce a concentrate with a much higher percentage content of the metal being extracted. Such mineral processing (beneficiation) involves crushing and grinding of the ores to a very fine grain size in order to liberate the valuable metal-bearing (sulfide) minerals which can then be concentrated. In some cases, the metalliferous (sulfide) minerals may have specific electrical or magnetic properties that can be exploited to enable separation and, hence, concentration. More commonly, froth flotation is used, whereby the surfaces of particles of a particular mineral phase are rendered water repellent by the addition of chemical reagents and hence are attracted to air bubbles pulsed through a mineral particle-water-reagent pulp. An understanding of the surface chemistry and surface reactivity of sulfide minerals is central to this major industrial process and, of course, knowledge of electrical and magnetic properties is very important in cases where those particular properties can be utilized. In the years since the publication of the first ever Reviews in Mineralogy volume (1974, at that time called MSA "Short Course Notes") which was entitled Sulfide Mineralogy, sulfides have become a focus of research interest for reasons centering on at least two other areas in addition to their key role in ore deposit studies and mineral processing technology. It is in these two new areas that much of the research on sulfides has been concentrated in recent years. The first of these areas relates to the capacity of sulfides to react with natural waters and acidify them; the resulting Acid Rock Drainage (ARD), or Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) where the sulfides are the waste products of mining, has the capacity to damage or destroy vegetation, fish and other aquatic life forms. These acid waters may also accelerate the dissolution of associated minerals containing potentially toxic elements (e.g., As, Pb, Cd, Hg, etc.) and these may, in turn, cause environmental damage. The much greater public awareness of the need to prevent or control AMD and toxic metal pollution has led to regulation and legislation in many parts of the world, and to the funding of research programs aimed at a greater understanding of the factors controlling the breakdown of sulfide minerals. We begin with a review of analytical methods for measuring and calibrating water contents in nominally anhydrous minerals by George Rossman. While infrared spectroscopy is still the most sensitive and most convenient method for detecting water in minerals, it is not intrinsically quantitative but requires calibration by some other, independent analytical method, such as nuclear reaction analysis, hydrogen manometry, or SIMS. A particular advantage of infrared spectroscopy, however, is the fact that it does not only probe the concentration, but also the structure of hydrous species in a mineral and in many cases the precise location of a proton in a mineral structure can be worked out based on infrared spectra alone. The methods and principles behind this are reviewed by Eugen Libowitzky and Anton Beran, with many illustrative examples. Compared to infrared spectroscopy, NMR is much less used in studying hydrogen in minerals, mostly due to its lower sensitivity, the requirement of samples free of paramagnetic ions such as Fe2+ and because of the more complicated instrumentation required for NMR measurements. However, NMR could be very useful under some circumstances. It could detect any hydrogen species in a sample, including such species as H2 that would be invisible with infrared. Potential applications of NMR to the study of hydrogen in minerals are reviewed by Simon Kohn. While structural models of "water" in minerals have already been deduced from infrared spectra several decades ago, in recent years atomistic modeling has become a powerful tool for predicting potential sites for hydrogen in minerals. The review by Kate Wright gives an overview over both quantum mechanical methods and classical methods based on interatomic potentials. Joseph Smyth then summarizes the crystal chemistry of hydrogen in high-pressure silicate and oxide minerals. As a general rule, the incorporation of hydrogen is not controlled by the size of potential sites in the crystal lattice; rather, the protons will preferentially attach to oxygen atoms that are electrostatically underbonded, such as the non-silicate oxygen atoms in some high-pressure phases. Moreover, heterovalent substitutions, e.g., the substitution of Al3+ for Si4+, can have a major effect on the incorporation of hydrogen. The second reason for even greater research interest in sulfide minerals arose initially from the discoveries of active hydrothermal systems in the deep oceans. The presence of life forms that have chemical rather than photosynthetic metabolisms, and that occur in association with newly-forming sulfides, has encouraged research on the potential of sulfide surfaces in catalyzing the reactions leading to assembling of the complex molecules needed for life on Earth. These developments have been associated with a great upsurge of interest in the interactions between microbes and minerals, and in the role that minerals can play in biological systems. In the rapidly growing field of geomicrobiology, metal sulfides are of major interest. This interest is related to a variety of processes including, for example, those where bacteria interact with sulfides as part of their metabolic activity and cause chemical changes such as oxidation or reduction, or those in which biogenic sulfide minerals perform a specific function, such as that of navigation in magnetotactic bacteria. The development of research in areas such as geomicrobiology and environmental mineralogy and geochemistry, is also leading to a greater appreciation of the role of sulfides (particularly the iron sulfides) in the geochemical cycling of the elements at or near the surface of the Earth. For example, the iron sulfides precipitated in the reducing environments beneath the surface of modern sediments in many estuarine areas may play a key role in the trapping of toxic metals and other pollutants. In our understanding of "Earth Systems," geochemical processes involving metal sulfides are an important part of the story. The main objective of the present text is to provide an up-to-date review of sulfide mineralogy and geochemistry. The emphasis is, therefore, on such topics as crystal structure and classification, electrical and magnetic properties, spectroscopic studies, chemical bonding, high and low temperature phase relations, thermochemistry, and stable isotope systematics. In the context of this book, emphasis is on metal sulfides sensu stricto where only the compounds of sulfur with one or more metals are considered. Where it is appropriate for comparison, there is brief discussion of the selenide or telluride analogs of the metal sulfides. When discussing crystal structures and structural relationships, the sulfosalt minerals as well as the sulfides are considered in some detail (see Chapter 2; also for definition of the term "sulfosalt"). However, in other chapters there is only limited discussion of sulfosalts, in part because there is little information available beyond knowledge of chemical composition and crystal structure. Given the dramatic developments in areas of research that were virtually non-existent at the time of the earlier reviews, major sections have been added here on sulfide mineral surface chemistry and reactivity, formation and transformation of metal-sulfur clusters and nanoparticles, modeling of hydrothermal precipitation, and on sulfides in biosystems. However, it should be emphasized that the growth in the literature on certain aspects of sulfide mineralogy over the past 20 years or so has been such that comprehensive coverage is not possible in a single volume. Thus, the general area of "sulfides in biosystems" is probably worthy of a volume in itself, and "environmental sulfide geochemistry" (including topics such as oxidative breakdown of sulfides) is another area where far more could have been written. In selecting areas for detailed coverage in this volume, we have been mindful of the existence of other relatively recent review volumes, including those in the RiMG series. It has also been our intention not to cover any aspects of the natural occurrence, textural or paragenetic relationships involving sulfides. This is published information that, although it may be supplemented by new observations, is likely to remain useful for a long period and largely not be superceded by later work. In the following chapters, the crystal structures, electrical and magnetic properties, spectroscopic studies, chemical bonding, thermochemistry, phase relations, solution chemistry, surface structure and chemistry, hydrothermal precipitation processes, sulfur isotope geochemistry and geobiology of metal sulfides are reviewed. Makovicky (Chapter 2) discusses the crystal structures and structural classification of sulfides and other chalcogenides (including the sulfosalts) in terms of the relationships between structural units. This very comprehensive survey, using a rather different and complementary approach to that used in previous review volumes, shows the great diversity of sulfide structures and the wealth of materials that remain to be characterized in detail. These materials include rare minerals, and synthetic sulfides that may represent as yet undescribed minerals. Pearce, Pattrick and Vaughan (Chapter 3) review the electrical and magnetic properties of sulfides, discussing the importance of this aspect of the sulfides to any understanding of their electronic structures (chemical bonding) and to applications ranging from geophysical prospecting and mineral extraction to geomagnetic and palaeomagnetic studies. Rapidly developing new areas of interest discussed include studies of the distinctive properties of sulfide nanoparticles. Wincott and Vaughan (Chapter 4) then outline the spectroscopic methods employed to study the crystal chemistry and electronic structures of sulfides. These range from UV-visible through infrared and Raman spectroscopies, to X-ray emission, photoemission and absorption, and to nuclear spectroscopies. Chemical bonding (electronic structure) in sulfides is the subject of the following chapter by Vaughan and Rosso (Chapter 5), a topic which draws on knowledge of electrical and magnetic properties and spectroscopic data as experimental input, as well as on a range of rapidly developing computational methods. Attention then turns to the thermochemistry of sulfides in a chapter by Sack and Ebel (Chapter 6) which is followed by discussion of phase equilibria at high temperatures in the review by Fleet (Chapter 7). Sulfides in aqueous systems, with emphasis on solution complexes and clusters, forms the subject matter of the chapter written by Rickard and Luther (Chapter 8). Sulfide mineral surfaces are the focus of the next two chapters, both by Rosso and Vaughan. The first of these chapters (Chapter 9) addresses characterization of the pristine sulfide surface, its structure and chemistry; the second (Chapter 10) concerns surface reactivity, including redox reactions, sorption phenomena, and the catalytic activity of sulfide surfaces. Reed and Palandri (Chapter 11) show in the next chapter how much can now be achieved in attempting to predict processes of sulfide precipitation in hydrothermal systems. The final chapters deal with two distinctive areas of sulfide mineralogy and geochemistry. Seal (Chapter 12) presents a comprehensive account of the theory and applications of sulfur isotope geochemistry; sulfur isotope fractionation can provide the key to understanding the natural processes of formation of sulfide deposits. In the final chapter, Posfai and Dunin-Borkowski (Chapter 13) review the rapidly developing area of sulfides in biosystems, discussing aspects of both sulfide mineral-microbe interactions and biomineralization processes involving sulfides.
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    ISBN: 0-939950-73-1 , 978-0-939950-73-7
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 61
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Sulfide Mineralogy and Geochemistry: Introduction and Overview by David J. Vaughan, p. 1 - 6 Chapter 2. Crystal Structures of Sulfides and other Chalcogenides by Emil Makovicky, p. 7 - 126 Chapter 3. Electrical and Magnetic Properties of Sulfides by Carolyn I. Pearce, Richard A.D. Pattrick, and David J. Vaughan, p. 127 - 180 Chapter 4. Spectroscopic Studies of Sulfides by Paul L. Wincott and David J. Vaughan, p. 181 - 230 Chapter 5. Chemical Bonding in Sulfide Minerals by David J. Vaughan and Kevin M. Rosso, p. 231 - 264 Chapter 6. Thermochemistry of Sulfide Mineral Solutions by Richard O. Sack and Denton S. Ebel, p. 265 - 364 Chapter 7. Phase Equilibria at High Temperatures by Michael E. Fleet, p. 365 - 420 Chapter 8. Metal Sulfide Complexes and Clusters by David Rickard and George W. Luther, III, p. 421 - 504 Chapter 9. Sulfide Mineral Surfaces by Kevin M. Rosso and David J. Vaughan, p. 505 - 556 Chapter 10. Reactivity of Sulfide Mineral Surfaces by Kevin M. Rosso and David J. Vaughan, p. 557 - 608 Chapter 11. Sulfide Mineral Precipitation from Hydrothermal Fluids by Mark H. Reed and James Palandri, p. 609 - 632 Chapter 12. Sulfur Isotope Geochemistry of Sulfide Minerals by Robert R. Seal, II, p. 633 - 678 Chapter 13. Sulfides in Biosystems by Mihaly Posfai and Rafal E. Dunin-Borkowski, p. 679 - 714
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    Ausgabe: 4., überarb. Aufl.
    ISBN: 3519335271
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    In: Rock-forming minerals
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    Ausgabe: 2nd ed.
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    Serie: Cambridge topics in mineral physics and chemistry 1
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    Ausgabe: 2nd ed.
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    In: Cambridge topics in mineral physics and chemistry
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    Seiten: xvii, 258 S.
    ISBN: 0521392934
    Serie: Cambridge topics in mineral physics and chemistry 4
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    Seiten: xxiv, 703 S.
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    Serie: NATO ASI series : C, Mathematical and physical sciences
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    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
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    Signatur: 11/M 99.0430 ; 11/M 00.0102 ; 11/M 99.0037
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: This volume was prepared for a short course by the same title, organized by Russell J. Hemley and Ho-kwang Mao and sponsored by the Mineralogical Society of America, December 4-6, 1998 on the campus of the University of California at Davis. High-pressure mineralogy has historically been a vital part of the geosciences, but it is only in the last few years that the field has emerged as a distinct discipline as a result of extraordinary recent developments in high-pressure techniques. The domain of mineralogy is now no less than the whole Earth, from the deep crust to the inner core-the entire range of pressures and temperatures under which the planet's constituents were formed or now exist. The primary goal of this field is to determine the physical and chemical properties of materials that underlie and control the structural and thermal state, processes, and evolution of the planet. New techniques that have come 'online' within the last couple of years make it possible to determine such properties under extreme pressures and temperatures with an accuracy and precision that rival measurements under ambient conditions. These investigations of the behavior of minerals under extreme conditions link the scale of electrons and nuclei with global processes of the Earth and other planets in the solar system. It is in this broad sense that the term 'Ultrahigh-Pressure Mineralogy' is used for the title of this volume of Reviews in Mineralogy. This volume sets out to summarize, in a tutorial fashion, knowledge in this rapidly developing area of physical science, the tools for obtaining that knowledge, and the prospects for future research. The book, divided into three sections, begins with an overview (Chapter 1) of the remarkable advances in the ability to subject minerals-not only as pristine single-crystal samples but also complex, natural mineral assemblages-to extreme pressure-temperature conditions in the laboratory. These advances parallel the development of an arsenal of analytical methods for measuring mineral behavior under those conditions. This sets the stage for section two (Chapters 2-8) which focuses on high-pressure minerals in their geological setting as a function of depth. This top-down approach begins with what we know from direct sampling of high-pressure minerals and rocks brought to the surface to detailed geophysical observations of the vast interior. The third section (Chapters 9-19) presents the material fundamentals, starting from properties of a chemical nature, such as crystal chemistry, thermochemistry, element partitioning, and melting, and moving toward the domain of mineral physics such as melt properties, equations of state, elasticity, rheology, vibrational dynamics, bonding, electronic structure, and magnetism. The Review thus moves from the complexity of rocks to their mineral components and finally to fundamental properties arising directly from the play of electrons and nuclei. The following themes crosscut its chapters. Composition of the mantle and core Our knowledge of the composition of the Earth in part is rooted in information on cosmochemical abundances of the elements and observations from the geological record. But an additional and essential part of this enterprise is the utilization of the growing information supplied by mineral physics and chemistry in detailed comparison with geophysical (e.g. seismological) observations for the bulk of the planet. There is now detailed information from a variety of sources concerning crust-mantle interactions in subduction (Liou et aI., Chapter 2; Mysen et aI., Chapter 3). Petrological, geochemical, and isotope studies indicate a mantle having significant lateral variability (McDonough and Rudnick, Chapter 4). The extent of chemical homogeneity versus layering with depth in the mantle, a question as old as the recognition of the mantle itself, is a first-order issue that threads its way throughout the book. Agee (Chapter 5) analyzes competing models in terms of mineral physics, focusing on the origin of seismic discontinuities in the upper mantle. Bina (Chapter 6) examines the constraints for the lower mantle, with particular emphasis given to the variation of the density and bulk sound velocity with depth through to the core-mantle boundary region (Jeanloz and Williams, Chapter 7). Stixrude and Brown (Chapter 8) examine bounds on the composition of the core. Mineral elasticity and the link to seismology The advent of new techniques is raising questions of the mineralogy and composition of the deep Interior to a new level. As a result of recent advances in seismology, the depth-dependence of seismic velocities and acoustic discontinuities have been determined with high precision, lateral heterogeneities in the planet have been resolved, and directional anisotropy has been determined (Chapters 6 and 7). The first-order problem of constraining the composition and temperature as a function of depth alone is being redefined by high-resolution velocity determinations that define lateral chemical or thermal variations. As discussed by Liebermann and Li (Chapter 15), measurements of acoustic velocities can now be carried out simultaneously at pressures that are an order of magnitude higher, and at temperatures that are a factor of two higher, than those possible just a few years ago. The tools are in hand to extend such studies to related properties of silicate melts (Dingwell, Chapter 13). Remarkably, the solid inner core is elastically anisotropic (Chapter 8); with developments in computational methods, condensed-matter theory now provides robust and surprising predictions for this effect (Stixrude et aI., Chapter 19), and with very recent experimental advances, elasticity measurements of core material at core pressures can be performed directly (Chapters 1 and 15). Mantle dynamics The Earth is a dynamic planet: the rheological properties of minerals define the dynamic flow and texture of material within the Earth. Measurement of rheological properties at mantle pressures is a significant challenge that can now be addressed (Weidner, Chapter 16). Deviatoric stresses down to 0.1 GPa to pressures approaching 300 GPa can be quantified in high-pressure cells using synchrotron radiation (Chapter 1). The stress levels are an appropriate scale for understanding earthquake genesis, including the nature of earthquakes that occur at great depth in subducted slabs (deep-focus earthquakes) as these slabs travel through the Earth's mantle. Newly developed high-pressure, high-precision x-ray tools such as monochromatic radiation with modern detectors with short time resolution and employing long duration times are now possible with third-generation synchrotron sources to study the rheology of deep Earth materials under pressure (Chapter 1). Fate of subducting slabs One of the principal interactions between the Earth's interior and surface is subduction of lithosphere into the mantle, resulting in arc volcanoes, chemical heterogeneity in the mantle, as well as deep-focus earthquakes (Chapters 2 and 3). Among the key chemical processes associated with subduction is the role of water in the recycling process (Prewitt and Downs, Chapter 9), which at shallower levels is essential for understanding arc volcanism. Mass and energy transport processes govern global recycling of organic and inorganic materials, integration of these constituents in the Earth's interior, the evolution (chemically and physically) of descending slabs near convergent plate boundaries, and the fate of materials below and above the descending slab. Chapters 5 and 6 discuss the evidence for entrainment and passage of slabs through the 670 km discontinuity, and the possibility of remnant slabs in the anomalous D" region near the core-mantle boundary (Chapter 7). The ultimate fate of the materials cycled to such depths may affect interactions at the core-mantle boundary and may also hold clues to the initiation of diapiric rise. The evolution and fate of a subducting slab can now be addressed by experimental simulation of slab conditions, including in situ monitoring of a simulated slab in high-pressure apparatus in situ x-ray and spectroscopic techniques. The chemistry of volatiles changes appreciably under deep Earth conditions: they can be structurally bound under pressure (Prewitt and Downs, Chapter 9). Melting Understanding pressure-induced changes in viscosity and other physical properties of melts is crucial for chemical differentiation processes ranging from models of the magma ocean in the Earth's early history to the formation of magmatic ore deposits. (Chapter 13). Recent evidence suggests that melting may take place at great depth in the mantle. Seismic observations of a low-velocity zone and seismic anisotropy at the base of the mantle have given rise to debate about the existence of regions of partial melt deep in the mantle (Chapter 7). Deep melting is also important for mantle convection from subduction of the lithosphere to the rising of hot mantle plumes. Very recent advances in determination of melting relations of mantle and core materials with laser-heating techniques are beginning to provide accurate constraints (Shen and Heinz, Chapter 12). Sometimes lost in the debate on melting curves is the fact that a decade ago, there simply were no data for most Earth materials, only guesses and (at best) approximate models. Moreover, it is now possible to carry out in situ melting studies on multi-component systems, including natural assemblages, to deep mantle conditions. These results address whether or not partial melting is responsible for the observed seismic anomalies at the base of the mantle and provide constraints for mantle convection models (Chapter 7). The enigma of the Earth's core The composition, structure, formation, evolution, and current dynamic state of the Earth's core is an area of tremendous excitement (Chapter 8). The keys to understanding the available geophysical data are the material properties of liquid and crystalline iron under core conditions. New synchrotron-based methods and new developments in theory are being applied to determine all of the pertinent physical properties, and in conjunction with seismological and geodynamic data, to develop a full understanding of the core and its interactions with the mantle (Chapter 7). There has been considerable progress in determining the melting and phase relations of iron into the megabar range with new techniques (Chapter 12). Constraints are also obtained from theory (Chapter 19). These results feed into geophysical models for the outer and inner core flow, structural state, evolution, and the geodynamo. Moreover, there is remarkable evidence that the Earth's inner core rotates at a different rate than the rest of the Earth. This evidence in turn rests on the observation that the inner core is elastically anisotropic, a subject of current experimental and theoretical study from the standpoint of mineral physics, as described above. The thermodynamic framework Whole Earth processes must be grounded in accurate thermodynamic descriptions of phase equilibria in multi-component systems, as discussed by Navrotsky (Chapter 10). New developments in this area include increasingly accurate equations of state (Duffy and Wang, Chapter 14) required for modeling of phase equilibria as well as for direct comparison with seismic density profiles through the planet. Recent developments in in situ vibrational spectroscopy and theoretical models provide a means for independently testing available thermochemical data and a means for extending those data to high pressures and temperatures (Gillet et aI., Chapter 17). Accurate determinations of crystal structures provide a basis for understanding thermochemical trends (Chapter 9). Systematics for understanding solid-solution behavior and element partitioning are now available, at least to the uppermost regions of the lower mantle (Fei, Chapter 11). New measurements for dense hydrous phases are beginning to provide answers to fundamental questions regarding their stability of hydrous phases in the mantle (Chapters 3 and 9) and the partitioning of hydrogen and oxygen between the mantle and core (Chapter 8). Novel physical phenomena at ultrahigh pressures One of the key recent findings in high-pressure research is the remarkable effect of pressure on the chemistry of the elements, at conditions ranging from deep metamorphism of crustal minerals (Chapter 2) to "contact metamorphism" at the core-mantle boundary (Chapter 7). Pressure-induced changes in Earth materials represent forefront problems in condensed-matter physics. New crystal structures appear and the chemistry of volatiles changes (Chapter 9). Pressure-induced electronic transitions and magnetic collapse in transition metal ions strongly affect mineral properties and partitioning of major, minor, and trace elements (Chapter 11). Evidence for these transitions from experiment (Chapter 18) and theory (Chapter 19) is important for developing models for Earth formation and chemical differentiation. The conventional view of structurally and chemically complex minerals of the crust giving way to simple, close-packed structures of the deep mantle and a simple iron core is being replaced by a new chemical picture wherein dense silicates, oxides, and metals exhibit unusual electronic and magnetic properties and chemistry. In the end, this framework must dovetail with seismological observations indicating an interior of considerable regional variability, both radially and laterally depending on depth (e.g. Chapters 6 and 7). New classes of global models Information concerning the chemical and physical properties of Earth materials at high pressures and temperatures is being integrated with geophysical and geochemical data to create a more comprehensive global view of the state, processes, and history of the Earth. In particular, models of the Earth's interior are being developed that reflect the details contained in the seismic record but are bounded by laboratory information on the physics and chemistry of the constituent materials. Such "Reference Earth Models" includes the development of reference data sets and modeling codes. Tools that produce seismological profiles from hypothesized mineralogies (Chapters 4 and 5) are now possible, as are tools for testing these models against 'reference' seismological data sets (Chapter 6). These models incorporate the known properties of the Earth, such as crust and lithosphere structure, and thus have both an Earth-materials and seismological orientation. Other planets The Earth cannot be understood without considering the rest of the solar system. The terrestrial planets of our solar system share a common origin, and our understanding of the formation of the Earth is tied to our understanding of the formation of its terrestrial neighbors, particularly with respect to evaluating the roles of homogeneous and heterogeneous processes during accretion. As a result of recent developments in space exploration, as well as in the scope of future planetary missions, we have new geophysical and geochemical data for the other terrestrial planets. Models for the accretion history of the Earth can now be reevaluated in relation to this new data. Experiments on known Earth materials provide the thermodynamic data necessary to calculate the high-pressure mineralogy of model compositions for the interior of Mars and Venus. Notably, the outer planets have the same volatile components as the Earth, just different abundances. Studies of the outer planets provide both an additional perspective on our own planet as well as a vast area of opportunity for application of these newly developed experimental techniques (Chapter 1 and 17). New techniques in the geosciences The utility of synchrotron radiation techniques in mineralogy has exceeded the expectations of even the most optimistic. New spectroscopic methods developed for high-pressure mineralogy are now available for characterizing small samples from other types of experiments. For example, the same techniques developed for in situ studies at high pressures and temperatures are being used to investigate microscopic inclusions such as coesite in high-pressure metamorphic rocks (Chapter 2) and deep-mantle samples as inclusions in diamond (Chapter 3). With the availability of a new generation of synchrotron radiation sources (Chapter 1) and spectroscopic techniques (Chapter 17), a systematic application of new methods, including micro tomographic x-ray analysis of whole rock samples, is now becoming routinely possible. Contributions in technology. Finally, there are implications beyond the geosciences. Mineralogy has historically has led many to conceptual and technical developments used in other fields, including metallurgy and materials science, and the new area of ultrahigh pressure mineralogy continues this tradition. As pointed out in Chapter 1, many highpressure techniques have their origins in geoscience laboratories, and in many respects, geoscience leads development of high-pressure techniques in physics, chemistry, and materials science. New developments include the application of synthetic diamond for new classes of 'large-volume' high-pressure cells. Interestingly, information on diamond stability, including its metastable growth, feeds back directly on efforts to grow large diamonds for the next generation of such high-pressure devices (Chapter 1). Microanalytical techniques, such as micro-spectroscopy and x-ray diffraction, developed for high-pressure research are now used outside of this field of research as well. The study of minerals and mineral analogs under pressure is leading to new materials. As in the synthesis of diamond itself, these same scientific approaches promise the development of novel, technological materials.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xvi, 671 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-48-0 , 978-0-939950-48-5
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in Mineralogy 37
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: I. Overview Chapter 1. New Windows on the Earth's Deep Interior by Ho-kwang Mao and Russell J. Hemley, p. 1 - 32 II. Minerals in Context: The Earth's Deep Interior Chapter 2. High-pressure minerals from deeply subducted metamorphic rocks by J.G. Liou, R.Y. Zhang, W.G. Ernst, Douglas Rumble III, and Shigenori Maruyama, p. 33 - 96 Chapter 3. The Upper Mantle Near Convergent Plate Boundaries by Bjorn O. Mysen, Peter Ulmer, Juergen Konzett, and Max W. Schmidt, p. 97 - 138 Chapter 4. Mineralogy and Composition of the Upper Mantle by William F. McDonough and Roberta L. Rudnick, p. 139 - 164 Chapter 5. Phase Transformations and Siesmic Structure in the Upper Mantle and Transition Zone by Carl B. Agee, p. 165 - 204 Chapter 6. Lower Mantle Mineralogy and the Geophysical Perspective by Craig R. Bina, p. 205 - 240 Chapter 7. The Core-Mantle Boundary Region by Raymond Jeanloz and Quentin Williams, p. 241 - 260 Chapter 8. The Earth's Core by Lars Stixrude and J. Michael Brown, p. 261 - 282 Chapter 9. High-Pressure Crystal Chemistry by Charles T. Prewitt and Robert T. Downs, p. 283 - 318 III. Mineral Fundamentals: Physics and Chemistry Chapter 10. Thermodynamics of High-Pressure Phases by Alexandra Navrotsky, p. 319 - 342 Chapter 11. Solid Solutions and Element Partitioning at High Pressures and Temperatures by Yingwei Fei, p. 343 - 368 Chapter 12. High-Pressure Melting of Deep Mantle and Core Materials by Guoyin Shen and Dion L. Heinz, p. 369 - 396 in the 2002-02-07 print version, the first page of Chapter 12 (page 369) was switched with the first page of Chapter 13 (p. 397) Chapter 13. Melt Viscosity and Diffusion under Elevated Pressures by Donalds B. Dingwell, p. 397 - 424 in the 2002-02-07 print version, the first page of Chapter 12 (page 369) was switched with the first page of Chapter 13 (p. 397) Chapter 14. Pressure-Volume-Temperature Equations of State by Thomas S. Duffy and Yanbin Wang, p. 425 - 458 Chapter 15. Elasticity at High Pressures and Temperatures by Robert C. Liebermann and Baosheng Li, p. 459 - 492 Chapter 16. Rheological Studies at High Pressure by Donald J. Weidner, p. 493 - 524 Chapter 17. Vibrational Properties at High Pressures and Temperatures by Philippe Gillet, Russell J. Hemley, and Paul F. McMillan, p. 525 - 590 Chapter 18. High-Pressure Electronic and Magnetic Properties by Russell J. Hemley, Ho-kwang Mao, and Ronald E. Cohen, p. 591 - 538 Chapter 19. Theory of Minerals at High Pressure by Lars Stixrude, Ronald E. Cohen, and Russell J. Hemley, p. 639 - 671
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  • 49
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
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    Signatur: 11/M 94.0168 ; 11/M 91.0707
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: When Van't Hoff calculated the effect of solution composition on the gypsum-anhydrite transition a century ago, he solved a significant geochemical problem (Hardie, 1967). Other well known examples of the early use of chemical thermodynamics in geology are Bowen's calculations of the plagioclase melting loop and the diopside-anorthite eutectic (Bowen, 1913, 1928). Except for a few specialists, however, these techniques were largely ignored by earth scientists during the first half of the 20th century. The situation changed dramatically by the 1950's when more and better thermodynamic data on geologic materials became available, and when thermodynamic arguments of increasing sophistication began to permeate the petrologic and geochemical literature. This rejuvenation was spearheaded by D.S. Korzhinskii, H. Ramberg, J.B. Thompson, J. Verhoogen and others. Today a graduating petrologist or geochemist can be expected to have a thorough grounding in geological thermodynamics. Rapid intellectual growth in a field brings with it the difficulty of keeping abreast of parallel and diverging specialties. In order to alleviate this problem, we asked a group of active researchers to contribute up-to-date summaries relating to their specialties in the thermodynamic modeling of geological materials, in particular minerals, fluids and melts. Whereas each of these topics could fill a book, by covering the whole range we hope to emphasize similarities as much as differences in the treatment of various materials. For instance, there are useful parallels to be noted between Margules parameters and Pitzer coefficients. The emphasis here is on modeling, after the required data have been collected, and the approach ranges form theoretical to empirical. We deliberately imposed few restrictions on the authors. Some chose to interpret modeling in the rigorous thermodynamic sense, while others approached their topics from more general geochemical viewpoints. We hope that any lack of unity and balance is compensated for by a collection of lively and idiosyncratic essays in which students and professionals will find new ideas and helpful hints. If the selection appears tilted towards fluids, it is because other recent summaries have emphasized minerals and melts. The editors and authors of this volume presented a short course, entitled "Thermodynamic Modeling of Geological Materials: Minerals, Fluids amd Melts," October 22-25, 1987, at the Wickenburg Inn near Phoenix, Arizona.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xiii, 499 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-21-9 , 978-0-939950-21-8
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy 17
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Thermodynamic Analysis of Phase Equilibria in Simple Mineral Systems by Robert C. Newton, p. 1 - 34 Chapter 2. Models of Crystalline solutions by Alexandra Navrotsky, p. 35 - 70 Chapter 3. Thermodynamics of Multicomponent Systems Containing Several Solid Solutions by Bernard J. Wood, p. 71 - 96 Chapter 4. Thermodynamic Model for Aqueous Solutions of Liquid-like Density by Kenneth S. Pitzer, p. 97 - 142 Chapter 5. Models of Mineral Solubility in Concentrated Brines with Application to Field Observations by John H. Weare, p. 143 - 176 Chapter 6. Calculation of the Thermodynamic Properties of Aqueous Species and the Solubilities of Minerals in Supercritical Electrolyte Solutions by Dimitri A. Sverjensky, p. 177 - 210 Chapter 7. Igneous Fluids by John R. Holloway, p. 211 - 234 Chapter 8. Ore Fluids: Magmatic to Supergene by George H. Brimhall and David A. Crerar, p. 235 - 322 Chapter 9. Thermodynamic Models of Molecular Fluids at the Elevated Pressures and Temperatures of Crustal Metamorphism by John M. Ferry and Lukas Baumgartner, p. 323 - 366 Chapter 10. Mineral Solubilities and Speciation in Supercritical Metamorphic Fluids by Hans P. Eugster and Lukas Baumgartner, p. 367 - 404 Chapter 11. Development of Models for Multicomponent Melts: Analysis of Synthetic Systems by Rober G. Berman and Thomas H. Brown, p. 405 - 442 Chapter 12. Modeling Magmatic Systems: Thermodynamic Relations by Mark S. Ghiorso, p. 443 - 466 Chapter 13. Modeling Magmatic Systems: Petrologic Applications by Mark S. Ghiorso and Ian S.E. Carmichael, p. 467 - 500
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  • 50
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
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    Signatur: 11/M 99.0429 ; 11/M 98.0500 ; 11/M 00.0101
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: We seek to understand the timing and processes by which our solar system formed and evolved. There are many ways to gain this understanding including theoretical calculations and remotely sensing planetary bodies with a number of techniques. However, there are a number of measurements that can only be made with planetary samples in hand. These samples can be studied in laboratories on Earth with the full range of high-precision analytical instruments available now or available in the future. The precisions and accuracies for analytical measurements in modern Earth-based laboratories are phenomenal. However, despite the fact that certain types of measurements can only be done with samples in hand, these samples will always be small in number and not necessarily representative of an entire planetary surface. Therefore, it is necessary that the planetary material scientists work hand-in-hand with the remote sensing community to combine both types of data sets. This exercise is in fact now taking place through an initiative of NASA's Curation and Analysis Planning Team for Extraterrestrial Materials (CAPTEM). This initiative is named "New Views of the Moon: Integrated Remotely Sensed, Geophysical, and Sample Datasets." As preliminary results of the Lunar Prospector mission become available, and with the important results of the Galileo and Clementine missions now providing new global data sets of the Moon, it is imperative that the lunar science community synthesize these new data and integrate them with one another and with the lunar-sample database. Integrated approaches drawing upon multiple data sets can be used to address key problems of lunar origin, evolution, and resource definition and utilization. The idea to produce this Reviews in Mineralogy (RIM) volume was inspired by the realization that many types of planetary scientists and, for that matter, Earth scientists will need access to data on the planetary sample suite. Therefore, we have attempted to put together, under one cover, a comprehensive coverage of the mineralogy and petrology of planetary materials. The book is organized with an introductory chapter that introduces the reader to the nature of the planetary sample suite and provides some insights into the diverse environments from which they come. Chapter 2 on Interplanetary Dust Particles (IDPs) and Chapter 3 on Chondritic Meteorites deal with the most primitive and unevolved materials we have to work with. It is these materials that hold the clues to the nature of the solar nebula and the processes that led to the initial stages of planetary formation. Chapter 4, 5, and 6 consider samples from evolved asteroids, the Moon and Mars respectively. Chapter 7 is a brief summary chapter that compares aspects of melt-derived minerals from differing planetary environments.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xv, 864 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-46-4 , 978-0-939950-46-1
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in Mineralogy 36
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. The Planetary Sample Suite and Environments of Origin by Charles K. Shearer, James J. Papike., and Frans J.M. Rietmeijer, p. 1-01 - 1-28 Chapter 2. Interplanetary Dust Particles by Frans J.M. Rietmeijer, p. 2-01 - 2-96 Chapter 3. Chondritic Meteorites by Adrian J. Brearley and Rhian H. Jones, p. 3-001 - 3-398 Chapter 4. Non-Chondritic Meteorites from Asteroidal Bodies by David Wayne Mittlefehldt, Timothy J. McCoy, Cyrena Anne Goodrich, and Alfred Kracher, p.4-001 - 4-196 Chapter 5. Lunar Samples by James J. Papike, G. Ryder, and Charles K. Shearer, p. 5-001 - 5-234 Chapter 6. Martian Meteorites by Harry Y. McSween, Jr. and Allan H. Treiman, p. 6-01 - 6-54 Chapter 7. Comparative Planetary Mineralogy: Chemistry of Melt- Derived Pyroxene, Feldspar, and Olivine by James J. Papike, p. 7-01 - 7-12
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  • 51
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    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Washinton, DC : United States Gov. Print. Off.
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    Signatur: S 90.0003(1142)
    In: U.S. Geological Survey circular
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: VII, 70 S.
    Serie: U.S. Geological Survey circular 1142
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
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  • 52
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Dordrecht [u.a.] : Kluwer Acad. Publ.
    Signatur: M 99.0454
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xviii, 409 S.
    ISBN: 0412832402
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 53
    Signatur: M 99.0585
    In: Heidelberger geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XI, 180 S.
    ISBN: 3892570671
    Serie: Heidelberger geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen 68
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 54
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Zographou : Theophrastus Publications
    Signatur: M 92.1297
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: VIII, 417 S.
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 55
    Signatur: 11/M 00.0417
    In: Modern crystallography
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XII, 520 S.
    Ausgabe: 3rd, rev. ed.
    ISBN: 3540674748
    Serie: Modern crystallography 2
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
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  • 56
    Signatur: 11/M 00.0416
    In: Modern crystallography
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XXI, 482 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd, enlarged ed., corr. printing
    ISBN: 3540565582
    Serie: Modern crystallography 1
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
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  • 57
    Signatur: M 01.0083
    In: Asociación Geológica Argentina
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: IV, 124 S.
    Serie: Asociación Geológica Argentina : Serie B, Didáctica y complementaria 23
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Spanisch
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  • 58
    Signatur: 11/M 01.0114
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: The review chapters in this volume were the basis for a short course on sulfate minerals sponsored by the Mineralogical Society of America (MSA) November 11-12, 2000 in Tahoe City, California, prior to the Annual Meeting of MSA, the Geological Society of America, and other associated societies in nearby Reno, Nevada. The conveners of the course (and editors of this volume of Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry), Alpers, John Jambor, and Kirk Nordstrom, also organized related topical sessions at the GSA meeting on sulfate minerals in both hydrothermal and low-temperature environments. Sulfate is an abundant and ubiquitous component of Earth's lithosphere and hydrosphere. Sulfate minerals represent an important component of our mineral economy, the pollution problems in our air and water, the technology for alleviating pollution, and the natural processes that affect the land we utilize. Vast quantities of gypsum are consumed in the manufacture of wallboard, and calcium sulfates are also used in sculpture in the forms of alabaster (gypsum) and papier-mache (bassanite). For centuries, AI-sulfate minerals, or "alums," have been used in the tanning and dyeing industries, and these sulfate minerals have also been a minor source of aluminum metal. Barite is used extensively in the petroleum industry as a weighting agent during drilling, and celestine (also known as "celestite") is a primary source of strontium for the ceramics, metallurgical, glass, and television face-plate industries. Jarosite is a major waste product of the hydrometallurgical processing of zinc ores and is used in agriculture to reduce alkalinity in soils. At many mining sites, the extraction and processing of coal or metal-sulfide ores (largely for gold, silver, copper, lead, and zinc) produce waste materials that generate acid-sulfate waters rich in heavy metals, commonly leading to contamination of water and sediment. Concentrated waters associated with mine wastes may precipitate a variety of metal-sulfate minerals upon evaporation, oxidation, or neutralization. Some of these sulfate minerals are soluble and store metals and acidity only temporarily, whereas others are insoluble and improve water quality by removing metals from the water column. There is considerable scientific interest in the mineralogy and geochemistry of sulfate minerals in both high-temperature (igneous and hydrothermal) and low-temperature (weathering and evaporite) environments. The physical scale of processes affected by aqueous sulfate and associated minerals spans from submicroscopic reactions at mineral-water interfaces to global issues of oceanic cycling and mass balance, and even to extraterrestrial applications in the exploration of other planets and their satellites. In mineral exploration, minerals of the alunite-jarosite supergroup are recognized as key components of the advanced argillic (acid-sulfate) hydrothermal alteration assemblage, and supergene sulfate minerals can be useful guides to primary sulfide deposits. The role of soluble sulfate minerals formed from acid mine drainage (and its natural equivalent, acid rock drainage) in the storage and release of potentially toxic metals associated with wet-dry climatic cycles (on annual or other time scales) is increasingly appreciated in environmental studies of mineral deposits and of waste materials from mining and mineral processing. This volume compiles and synthesizes current information on sulfate minerals from a variety of perspectives, including crystallography, geochemical properties, geological environments of formation, thermodynamic stability relations, kinetics of formation and dissolution, and environmental aspects. The first two chapters cover crystallography (Chapter 1) and spectroscopy (Chapter 2). Environments with alkali and alkaline earth sulfates are described in the next three chapters, on evaporites (Chapter 3), barite-celestine deposits (Chapter 4), and the kinetics of precipitation and dissolution of gypsum, barite, and celestine (Chapter 5). Acidic environments are the theme for the next four chapters, which cover soluble metal salts from sulfide oxidation (Chapter 6), iron and aluminum hydroxysulfates (Chapter 7), jarosites in hydrometallugy (Chapter 8), and alunite-jarosite crystallography, thermodynamics, and geochronology (Chapter 9). The next two chapters discuss thermodynamic modeling of sulfate systems from the perspectives of predicting sulfate-mineral solubilities in waters covering a wide range in composition and concentration (Chapter 10) and predicting interactions between sulfate solid solutions and aqueous solutions (Chapter 11). The concluding chapter on stable-isotope systematics (Chapter 12) discusses the utility of sulfate minerals in understanding the geological and geochemical processes in both high- and low-temperature environments, and in unraveling the past evolution of natural systems through paleoclimate studies.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xiii, 608 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-52-9 , 978-0-939950-52-2
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 40
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. The Crystal chemistry of Sulfate Minerals by Frank C. Hawthorne, Servey V. Krivovichev, and Peter C. Burns, p. 1 - 112 Chapter 2. X-ray and Vibrational Spectroscopy of Sulfate in Earth Materials by Satish C. B. Myneni, p. 113 - 172 Chapter 3. Sulfate Minerals in Evaporite Deposits by Ronald J. Spencer, p. 173 - 192 Chapter 4. Barite-Celestine Geochemistry and Environments of Formation by Jeffrey S. Hanor, p. 193 - 276 Chapter 5. Precipitation and Dissolution of Alkaline Earth Sulfates: Kinetics and Surface Energy by A. Hina and G. H. Nancollas, p. 277 - 302 Chapter 6. Metal-sulfate Salts from Sulfide Mineral Oxidation by John L. Jambor, D. Kirk Nordstrom, and Charles N. Alpers, p. 303 - 350 Chapter 7. Iron and Aluminum Hydroxysulfates from Acid Sulfate Waters by J. M. Bigham and D. Kirk Nordstrom, p. 351 - 404 Chapter 8. Jarosites and Their Application in Hydrometallurgy by John E. Dutrizac and John L. Jambor, p. 405 - 452 Chapter 9. Alunite-Jarosite Crystallography, Thermodynamics, and Geochemistry by R. E. Stoffregen, C. N.. Alpers, and John L. Jambor, p. 453 - 480 Chapter 10. Solid-Solution Solubilities and Thermodynamics: Sulfates, Carbonates and Halides by Pierre Glynn, p. 481 - 512 Chapter 11. Predicting Sulfate-Mineral Solubility in Concentrated Waters by Carol Ptacek and David Blowes, p. 513 - 540 Chapter 12. Stable Isotope Systematics of Sulfate Minerals by Robert R. Seal, II, Charles N. Alpers, and Robert O. Rye, p. 541 - 602
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  • 59
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Soc. of America
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    Signatur: 11/M 01.0313
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: The review chapters in this volume were the basis for a short course on molecular modeling theory jointly sponsored by the Geochemical Society (GS) and the Mineralogical Society of America (MSA) May 18-20, 2001 in Roanoke, Virginia which was held prior to the 2001 Goldschmidt Conference in nearby Hot Springs, Virginia. Dr. William C. Luth has had a long and distinguished career in research, education and in the government. He was a leader in experimental petrology and in training graduate students at Stanford University. His efforts at Sandia National Laboratory and at the Department of Energy's headquarters resulted in the initiation and long-term support of many of the cutting edge research projects whose results form the foundations of these short courses. Bill's broad interest in understanding fundamental geochemical processes and their applications to national problems is a continuous thread through both his university and government career. He retired in 1996, but his efforts to foster excellent basic research, and to promote the development of advanced analytical capabilities gave a unique focus to the basic research portfolio in Geosciences at the Department of Energy. He has been, and continues to be, a friend and mentor to many of us. It is appropriate to celebrate his career in education and government service with this series of courses in cutting-edge geochemistry that have particular focus on Department of Energy-related science, at a time when he can still enjoy the recognition of his contributions. Molecular modeling methods have become important tools in many areas of geochemical and mineralogical research. Theoretical methods describing atomistic and molecular-based processes are now commonplace in the geosciences literature and have helped in the interpretation of numerous experimental, spectroscopic, and field observations. Dramatic increases in computer power-involving personal computers, workstations, and massively parallel supercomputers-have helped to increase our knowledge of the fundamental processes in geochemistry and mineralogy. All researchers can now have access to the basic computer hardware and molecular modeling codes needed to evaluate these processes. The purpose of this volume of Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry is to provide the student and professional with a general introduction to molecular modeling methods and a review of various applications of the theory to problems in the geosciences. Molecular mechanics methods that are reviewed include energy minimization, lattice dynamics, Monte Carlo methods, and molecular dynamics. Important concepts of quantum mechanics and electronic structure calculations, including both molecular orbital and density functional theories, are also presented. Applications cover a broad range of mineralogy and geochemistry topics-from atmospheric reactions to fluid-rock interactions to properties of mantle and core phases. Emphasis is placed on the comparison of molecular simulations with experimental data and the synergy that can be generated by using both approaches in tandem. We hope the content of this review volume will help the interested reader to quickly develop an appreciation for the fundamental theories behind the molecular modeling tools and to become aware of the limits in applying these state-of-the-art methods to solve geosciences problems.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xii, 531 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-54-5 , 978-0-939950-54-6
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 42
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Molecular Modeling in Mineralogy and Geochemistry by Randall T. Cygan, p. 1 - 36 Chapter 2. Simulating the Crystal Structures and Properties of Ionic Materials From Interatomic Potentials by Julian D. Gale, p. 37 - 62 Chapter 3. Application of Lattice Dynamics and Molecular Dynamics Techniques to Minerals and Their Surfaces by Steve C. Parker, Nora H. de Leeuw, Ekatarina Bourova, and David J. Cooke, p. 63 - 82 Chapter 4. Molecular Simulations of Liquid and Supercritical Water: Thermodynamics, Structure, and Hydrogen Bonding by Andrey G. Kalinichev, p. 83 - 130 Chapter 5. Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Silicate Glasses and Glass Surfaces by Stephen H. Garofalini, p. 131 - 168 Chapter 6. Molecular Models of Surface Relaxation, Hydroxylation, and Surface Charging at Oxide-Water Interfaces by James R. Rustad, p. 169 - 198 Chapter 7. Structure and Reactivity of Semiconducting Mineral Surfaces: Convergence of Molecular Modeling and Experiment by Kevin M. Rosso, p. 199 - 272 Chapter 8. Quantum Chemistry and Classical Simulations of Metal Complexes in Aqueous Solutions by David M. Sherman, p. 273 - 318 Chapter 9. First Principles Theory of Mantle and Core Phases by Lars Stixrude, p. 319 - 344 Chapter 10. A Computational Quantum Chemical Study of the Bonded Interactions in Earth Materials and Structurally and Chemically Related Molecules by G. V. Gibbs, Monte B. Boisen, Jr., Lesa L. Beverly, and Kevin M. Rosso, p. 345 - 382 Chapter 11. Modeling the Kinetics and Mechanisms of Petroleum and Natural Gas Generation: A First Principles Approach by Yitian Xiao, p. 383 - 436 Chapter 12. Calculating the NMR Properties of Minerals, Glasses, and Aqueous Species by John D. Tossell, p. 437 - 458 Chapter 13. Interpretation of Vibrational Spectra Using Molecular Orbital Theory Calculations by James D. Kubicki, p. 459 - 484 Chapter 14. Molecular Orbital Modeling and Transition State Theory in Geochemistry by Mihali A. Felipe, Yitian Xiao, and James D. Kubicki, p. 485 - 531
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  • 60
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
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    Signatur: 11/M 01.0314
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: The first half-century of X-ray crystallography, beginning with the elucidation of the sodium chloride structure in 1914, was devoted principally to the determination of increasingly complex atomic topologies at ambient conditions. The pioneering work of the Braggs, Pauling, Wyckoff, Zachariasen and many other investigators revealed the structural details and underlying crystal chemical principles for most rock-forming minerals (see, for example, Crystallography in North America, edited by D. McLachlan and J. P. Glusker, NY, American Crystallographic Association, 1983). These studies laid the crystallographic foundation for modem mineralogy. The past three decades have seen a dramatic expansion of this traditional crystallographic role to the study of the relatively subtle variations of crystal structure as a function of temperature, pressure, or composition. Special sessions on "High temperature crystal chemistry" were first held at the Spring Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (April 19, 1972) and the Ninth International Congress of Crystallography (August 30, 1972). The Mineralogical Society of America subsequently published a special 11-paper section of American Mineralogist entitled "High Temperature Crystal Chemistry," which appeared as Volume 58, Numbers 5 and 6, Part I in July-August, 1973. The first complete three-dimensional structure refinements of minerals at high pressure were completed in the same year on calcite (Merrill and Bassett, Acta Crystallographica B31, 343-349, 1975) and on gillespite (Hazen and Burnham, American Mineralogist 59, 1166-1176, 1974). Rapid advances in the field of non-ambient crystallography prompted Hazen and Finger to prepare the monograph Comparative Crystal Chemistry: Temperature, Pressure, Composition and the Variation of Crystal Structure (New York: Wiley, 1982). At the time, only about 50 publications documenting the three-dimensional variation of crystal structures at high temperature or pressure had been published, though general crystal chemical trends were beginning to emerge. That work, though increasingly out of date, remained in print until recently as the only comprehensive overview of experimental techniques, data analysis, and results for this crystallographic sub-discipline. This Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry volume was conceived as an updated version of Comparative Crystal Chemistry. A preliminary chapter outline was drafted at the Fall 1998 American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco by Ross Angel, Robert Downs, Larry Finger, Robert Hazen, Charles Prewitt and Nancy Ross. In a sense, this volume was seen as a "changing of the guard" in the study of crystal structures at high temperature and pressure. Larry Finger retired from the Geophysical Laboratory in July, 1999, at which time Robert Hazen had shifted his research focus to mineral-mediated organic synthesis. Many other scientists, including most of the authors in this volume, are now advancing the field by expanding the available range of temperature and pressure, increasing the precision and accuracy of structural refinements at non-ambient conditions, and studying ever more complex structures. The principal objective of this volume is to serve as a comprehensive introduction to the field of high-temperature and high-pressure crystal chemistry, both as a guide to the dramatically improved techniques and as a summary of the voluminous crystal chemical literature on minerals at high temperature and pressure. The book is largely tutorial in style and presentation, though a basic knowledge of X-ray crystallographic techniques and crystal chemical principles is assumed. The book is divided into three parts. Part I introduces crystal chemical considerations of special relevance to non-ambient crystallographic studies. Chapter 1 treats systematic trends in the variation of structural parameters, including bond distances, cation coordination, and order-disorder with temperature and pressure, while Chapter 2 considers P-V-T equation-of-state formulations relevant to x-ray structure data. Chapter 3 reviews the variation of thermal displacement parameters with temperature and pressure. Chapter 4 describes a method for producing revealing movies of structural variations with pressure, temperature or composition, and features a series of "flip-book" animations. These animations and other structural movies are also available as a supplement to this volume on the Mineralogical Society of America web site at RiMG041 Programs. Part II reviews the temperature- and pressure-variation of structures in major mineral groups. Chapter 5 presents crystal chemical systematics of high-pressure silicate structures with six-coordinated silicon. Subsequent chapters highlight temperature- and pressure variations of dense oxides (Chapter 6), orthosilicates (Chapter 7), pyroxenes and other chain silicates (Chapter 8), framework and other rigid-mode structures (Chapter 9), and carbonates (Chapter 10). Finally, the variation of hydrous phases and hydrogen bonding are reviewed in Chapter 11, while molecular solids are summarized in Chapter 12. Part III presents experimental techniques for high-temperature and high-pressure studies of single crystals (Chapters 13 and 14, respectively) and polycrystalline samples (Chapter 15). Special considerations relating to diffractometry on samples at non-ambient conditions are treated in Chapter 16. Tables in these chapters list sources for relevant hardware, including commercially available furnaces and diamond-anvil cells. Crystallographic software packages, including diffractometer operating systems, have been placed on the Mineralogical Society web site for this volume. This volume is not exhaustive and opportunities exist for additional publications that review and summarize research on other mineral groups. A significant literature on the high-temperature and high-pressure structural variation of sulfides, for example, is not covered here. Also missing from this compilation are references to a variety of studies of halides, layered oxide superconductors, metal alloys, and a number of unusual silicate structures.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: viii, 596 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-53-7 , 978-0-939950-53-9
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 41
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Contents of Part I. p. vii - viii Part I: Characterization and Interpretation of Structural Variations with Temperature and Pressure Chapter 1. Principles of Comparative Crystal Chemistry by Robert M. Hazen, Robert T. Downs, and Charles T. Prewitt, p. 1 - 34 Chapter 2. Equations of State by Ross J. Angel, p. 35 - 60 Chapter 3. Analysis of Harmonic Displacement Factors by Robert T. Downs, p. 61 - 88 Chapter 4. Animation of Crystal Structure Variations with Pressure, Temperature and Composition by Robert T. Downs and P.J. Heese, p. 89 - 118 Part II: Variation of Structures with Temperature and Pressure Contents of Part II. p. 119 - 122 Chapter 5. Systematics of High-Pressure Silicate Structures by Larry W. Finger and Robert M. Hazen, p. 123 - 156 Chapter 6. Comparative Crystal Chemistry of Dense Oxide Minerals by Joseph R. Smyth, Steven D. Jacobsen, and Robert M. Hazen, p. 157 - 186 Chapter 7. Comparative Crystal Chemistry of Orthosilicate Minerals by Joseph R. Smyth, Steven D. Jacobsen, and Robert M. Hazen, p. 187 - 210 Chapter 8. Chain and Layer Silicates at High Temperatures and Pressures by Hexiong Yang and Charles T. Prewitt, p. 211 - 256 Chapter 9. Framework Structures by Nancy L. Ross, p. 257 - 288 Chapter 10. Structural Variations in Carbonates by Simon A.T. Redfern, p. 289 - 308 Chapter 11. Hydrous Phases and Hydrogen Bonding at High Pressure by Charles T. Prewitt and John B. Parise, p. 309 - 334 Chapter 12. Molecular Crystals by Russell J. Hemley and Przemyslaw Dera, p. 335 - 420 Part III: Experimental Techniques Contents of Part III. p. 421 - 424 Chapter 13. High-Temperature Devices and Environmental Cells for X-ray and Neutron Diffraction Experiments by Ronald C. Peterson and Hexiong Yang, p. 425 - 444 Chapter 14. High-Pressure Single-Crystal Techniques by Ronald Miletich, David R. Allan, and Werner F. Kuhs, p. 445 - 520 Chapter 15. High-Pressure and High-Temperature Powder Diffraction by Yingwei Fei and Yanbin Wang, p. 521 - 558 Chapter 16. High-Temperature­High-Pressure Diffractometry by Ross J. Angel, Robert T. Downs, and Larry W. Finger, p. 559 - 596
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  • 61
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    New York u.a. : Plenum Press
    Signatur: M 93.0587
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: ix, 292 S.
    ISBN: 0306433141
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 62
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 93.0804
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: This volume represents the proceedings of a course by the same title held at Harbor House Resort and Conference Center on Nantucket Island off the coast of Massachusetts, October 22-24, 1993. Numerous minerals are known to induce pulmonary diseases. The asbestos minerals (chrysotile and asbestiform amphiboles) are by far the most infamous. However, a number of silica polymorphs, clays, and zeolites have also been studied in great detail, as have several titania polymorphs, hematite, and magnetite (which are often used as negative controls in biological experiments). In fact, the relatively recent attention received by erionite (a fibrous zeolite) has arguably made it the most notorious of the minerals studied thus far. The processes that lead to the development of disease (or pathogenesis) by minerals very likely occur at or near the mineral-fluid interface (as do many geochemical processes!). Thus the field of "mineral-induced pathogenesis" is a prime candidate for interdisciplinary research, involving mineral scientists, health scientists, petrologists, pathologists, geochemists, biochemists, and surface scientists, to name a few. The success of such an interdisciplinary approach rests on the ability of scientists in very different fields to communicate, and this is hampered by vocabulary barriers and an unfamiliarity with concepts, approaches, and problems. It can be difficult enough for a geoscientist or bioscientist to maintain fluency in the many fields tangential to his or her own field, and this problem is only exacerbated when one investigates problems that are crossdisciplinary. Nevertheless, important advances can be facilitated if these barriers are overcome. This review volume and the short course upon which it was based are intended to provide some of the necessary tools for the researcher interested in this area of interdisciplinary research. The chapters present several of the important problems, concepts, and approaches from both the geological and biological ends of the spectrum. These two extremes are partially integrated throughout the book by cross-referencing between chapters. Chapter 1 also presents a general introduction into the ways in which these two areas overlap. However, many of the areas ripe for the interdisciplinarian will become obvious after reading the various chapters. The final chapter of this book discusses some of the regulatory aspects of minerals. Ultimately, the regulatory arena is where this type of interdisciplinary approach can make an impact, and hopefully better communication between all parties will accomplish this goal. A glossary is included at the end of this book, because the complexity of scientific terms in the two fields can thwart even the most enthusiastic of individuals.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xvi, 584 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-33-2 , 978-0-939950-33-1
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy 28
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Merging the Geological and Biological Sciences: An Integrated Approach to the Study of Mineral-Induced Pulmonary Diseases by George D. Guthrie, Jr. and Brooke T. Mossman, p. 1 - 6 Chapter 2. Rocks, Minerals, and a Dusty World by Cornelius Klein, p. 7 - 60 Chapter 3. Mineralogy of Amphiboles and 1:1 Layer Silicates by David R. Veblen and Ann G. Wylie, p. 61 - 138 Chapter 4. Mineralogy of Clay and Zeolite Dusts (Exclusive of 1:1 Layer Silicates) by David L. Bish and George D. Guthrie, Jr., p. 139 - 184 Chapter 5. Structure and Chemistry of Silica, Metal Oxides, and Phosphates by Peter J. Heaney and Jillian A. Banfield, p. 185 - 234 Chapter 6. Preparation and Purification of Mineral Dusts by Steve J. Chipera, George D. Guthrie, Jr., and David L. Bish, p. 235 - 250 Chapter 7. Mineral Characterization in Biological Studies by George D. Guthrie, Jr., p. 251 - 274 Chapter 8. Surface Chemistry, Structure, and Reactivity of Hazardous Mineral Dust by Michael F. Hochella, Jr., p. 275 - 308 Chapter 9. Limitations of the Stanton Hypothesis by Robert P. Nolan and Arthur M. Langer, p. 309 - 326 Chapter 10. The Surface Thermodynamic Properties of Silicates and Their Interactions with Biological Materials by Rossman F. Giese, Jr. and Carel J. van Oss, p. 327 - 346 Chapter 11. Epidemiology and Pathology of Asbestos-Related Diseases by Agnes B. Kane, p. 347 - 360 Chapter 12. Health Effects of Mineral Dusts Other Than Asbestos by Malcolm Ross, Robert P. Nolan, Arthur M. Langer, and W. Clark Cooper, p. 361 - 408 Chapter 13. Asbestos Lung Burden and Disease Patterns in Man by Andrew Churg, p. 409 - 426 Chapter 14. Defense Mechanisms Against Inhaled Particles and Associated Particle-Cell Interactions by Bruce E. Lehnert, p. 427 - 470 Chapter 15. In Vivo Assays to Evaluate the Pathogenic Effects of Minerals in Rodents by John M. G. Davis, p. 471 - 488 Chapter 16. In Vitro Evaluation of Mineral Cytotoxicity and Inflammatory Activity by Kevin E. Driscoll, p. 489 - 512 Chapter 17. Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Disease by Brooke T. Mossman, p. 513 - 522 Chapter 18. Biological Studies on the Carcinogenic Mechanisms of Quartz by Umberto Saffiotti, Lambert N. Daniel, Yan Mao, A. Olufemi Williams, M. Edward Kaighn, Nadera Ahmed, and Alan D. Knapton, p. 523 - 544 Chapter 19. Regulatory Approaches to Reduce Human Health Risks Associated with Exposures to Mineral Fibers by V. T. Vu, p. 545 - 554
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  • 63
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 99.0611
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: This volume was written in preparation for a short course by the same title, sponsored by the Mineralogical Society of America, October 22 and 23, 1999 in Golden, Colorado, prior to MSA's joint annual meeting with the Geological Society of America. Research emphasis in traditional mineralogy has often focused on detailed studies of a few hundred common rock-forming minerals. However, scanning the contents of a current issue of American Mineralogist or Canadian Mineralogist, or the titles of recent Reviews in Mineralogy volumes reveals that the emphasis of mineralogical research has undergone considerable change recently. Less-common, low-temperature minerals are receiving ever increasing attention, often owing to their importance to the environment. A tremendous challenge lies ahead for mineralogists and geochemists: the occurrences, structures, stabilities, and paragenesis of perhaps a thousand low-temperature minerals require detailed study if geoscientists are to be properly equipped to tackle environmental problems today and in the future. In many low-temperature environments mineral assemblages are extremely complex, with more than 10 species common in many em-size samples. This Reviews in Mineralogy volume provides detailed reviews of various aspects of the mineralogy and geochemistry of uranium; hopefully the reader will benefit from this presentation, and perhaps more importantly, the reader may develop a sense of the tremendous amount of work that remains to be done, not only concerning uranium in natural systems, but for low-temperature mineralogy and geochemistry in general. The low crustal abundance of uranium belies its mineralogical and geochemical significance: more than five percent of minerals known today contain uranium as an essential constituent. Uranium is a geochemical and geochronological indicator, and the U-Pb decay series has long been one of the most important systems for dating rocks and minerals. Uranium is an important energy source, and the uranium nuclear fuel cycle has generated a great deal of interest in uranium mineralogy and geochemistry since the first controlled nuclear fission reaction nearly sixty years ago. Current interest in uranium mineralogy and geochemistry stems in large part from the utilization of uranium as a natural resource. Environmental issues such as coping with uranium mine and mill tailings and other uranium-contaminated sites, as well as permanent disposal of highly radioactive uranium-based nuclear fuels in deep geologic repositories, have all refocused attention on uranium. More than twenty years have passed since the 1978 Mineralogical Association of Canada's Short Course on Uranium Deposits. A realignment of research focus has clearly occurred since then, from exploration and exploitation to environmental remediation and geological "forecasting" of potential future impacts of decisions made today. The past decades have produced numerous remarkable advances in our understanding of uranium mineralogy and geochemistry, as well as technological and theoretical advances in analytical techniques which have revolutionized research of trace-elements, including uranium. It was these advances that provided us the impetus to develop this volume. We have attempted to produce a volume that incorporates most important aspects of uranium in natural systems, while providing some insight into important applications of uranium mineralogy and geochemistry to environmental problems. The result is a blend of perspectives and themes: historical (Chapter 1), crystal structures (Chapter 2), systematic mineralogy and paragenesis (Chapters 3 and 7), the genesis of uranium ore deposits (Chapters 4 and 6), the geochemical behavior of uranium and other actinides in natural fluids (Chapter 5), environmental aspects of uranium such as microbial effects, groundwater contamination and disposal of nuclear waste (Chapters 8, 9 and 10), and various analytical techniques applied to uranium-bearing phases (Chapters 11-14).
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 679 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-50-2 , 978-0-939950-50-8
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy 38
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Radioactivity and the 20th Century by Rodney C. Ewing, p. 1 - 22 Chapter 2. The Crystal Chemistry of Uranium by Peter C. Burns, p. 23 - 90 Chapter 3. Systematics and Paragenesis of Uranium Minerals by Robert Finch and Takaski Murakami, p. 91 - 180 Chapter 4. Stable Isotope Geochemistry of Uranium Deposits by Mostafa Fayek and T. Kurtis Kyser, p. 181 - 220 Chapter 5. Environmental Aqueous Geochemistry of Actinides by William M. Murphy and Everett. L. Shock, p. 221 - 254 Chapter 6. Uranium Ore Deposits: Products of the Radioactive Earth by Jane Plant, Peter R. Simpson, Barry Smith, and Brian F. Windley, p. 255 - 320 Chapter 7. Mineralogy and Geochemistry of Natural Fission Reactors in Gabon by Janusz Janeczek, p. 321 - 392 Chapter 8. Geomicrobiology of Uranium by Yohey Suzuki and Jillian F. Banfield, p. 393 - 432 Chapter 9. Uranium Contamination in the Subsurface: Characterization and Remediation by Abdessalam Abdelouas, Werner Lutze, and H. Eric Nuttall, p. 433 - 474 Chapter 10. Uranium Mineralogy and the Geologic Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel by David Wronkiewicz and Edgar Buck, p. 475 - 498 Chapter 11. Spectroscopic Techniques Applied to Uranium in Minerals by John M. Hanchar, p. 499 - 520 Chapter 12. Infrared Spectroscopy and Thermal Analysis of the Uranyl Minerals by Jiri Cejka, p. 521- 622 Chapter 13. Analytical Methods for the Determination of Uranium in Geological and Environmental Materials by Stephen F. Wolf, p. 623 - 652 Chapter 14. Identification of Uranium-bearing Minerals and Inorganic Phases by X-ray Powder Diffraction by Frances C. Hill , p. 653 - 680
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  • 64
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Aleksandrov : VNIISIMS
    Signatur: M 00.0469
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 235 S.
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Unbestimmte Sprache
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 65
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 00.0603
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Phase transformations occur in most types of materials, including ceramics, metals, polymers, diverse organic and inorganic compounds, minerals, and even crystalline viruses. They have been studied in almost all branches of science, but particularly in physics, chemistry, engineering, materials science and earth sciences. In some cases the objective has been to produce materials in which phase transformations are suppressed, to preserve the structural integrity of some engineering product, for example, while in other cases the objective is to maximise the effects of a transformation, so as to enhance properties such as superconductivity, for example. A long tradition of studying transformation processes in minerals has evolved from the need to understand the physical and thermodynamic properties of minerals in the bulk earth and in the natural environment at its surface. The processes of interest have included magnetism, ferroelasticity, ferroelectricity, atomic ordering, radiation damage, polymorphism, amorphisation and many others-in fact there are very few minerals which show no influence of transformation processes in the critical range of pressures and temperatures relevant to the earth. As in all other areas of science, an intense effort has been made to tum qualitative understanding into quantitative description and prediction via the simultaneous development of theory, experiments and simulations. In the last few years rather fast progress has been made in this context, largely through an interdisciplinary effort, and it seemed to us to be timely to produce a review volume for the benefit of the wider scientific community which summarises the current state of the art. The selection of transformation processes covered here is by no means comprehensive, but represents a coherent view of some of the most important processes which occur specifically in minerals.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: x, 361 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-51-0 , 978-0-939950-51-5
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 39
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Rigid unit modes in framework structures by Martin T. Dove, Kostya O. Trachenko, Matthew G. Tucker, David A. Keen, p. 1 - 34 Chapter 2. Strain and elasticity at structural phase transitions in minerals by Michael A. Carpenter, p. 35 - 64 Chapter 3. Mesoscopic twin patterns in ferroelastic and co-elastic minerals by Ekard K. H. Salje, p. 65 - 84 Chapter 4. High-pressure structural phase transitions by Ross J. Angel, p. 85 - 104 Chapter 5. Order-disorder phase transitions by Simon A. T. Redfern, p. 105 - 134 Chapter 6. Phase transformations induced by solid solution by Peter J. Heaney, p. 134 - 174 Chapter 7. Magnetic transitions in minerals by Richard J. Harrison, p. 175 - 202 Chapter 8. NMR spectroscopy of phase transitions in minerals by Brian L. Phillips, p. 203 - 240 Chapter 9. Insights into phase transformations from Mössbauer spectroscopy by Catherine A. McCammon, p. 241 - 264 Chapter 10. Hard mode spectroscopy of phase transitions by Ulli Bismayer, p. 265 - 284 Chapter 11. Synchrotron studies of phase transformations by John B. Parise, p. 285 - 318 Chapter 12. Radiation-induced amorphization by Rodney C. Ewing, Aikiviathes Meldrum, LuMin Wang, and ShiXin Wang, p. 319 - 362
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  • 66
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    New York [u.a.] : Wiley
    Signatur: M 92.1377
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XV, 453 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 0471607118
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 67
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Essex : Longman
    Signatur: 11/M 92.1325 ; M 96.0041
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XVI, 696 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 0582300940
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 68
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    New York [u.a.] : Plenum Pr.
    Signatur: M 93.0589
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: viii, 400 S.
    ISBN: 0306438240
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 69
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Heidelberg
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: M 99.0586
    In: Heidelberger geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: III, 323 S.
    ISBN: 3931161153
    Serie: Heidelberger geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen 89
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 70
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    New York [u.a.] : Dekker
    Signatur: M 00.0213
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xii, 705 S. + 1 Disk.
    Ausgabe: 2nd., rev. and expanded
    ISBN: 0824799372
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 71
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Leiden : Nationaal Natuurhistorisch Museum Naturalis
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    Signatur: S 93.0422(118)
    In: Scripta geologica
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: 46 S.
    Serie: Scripta Geologica 118
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin unten
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  • 72
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Milton Keynes : Open Univ. Press
    Signatur: M 92.0567
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 208 S. : Ill.
    ISBN: 0335152171
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 73
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 92.0613
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: In October 1975 a Short Course on Feldspar Mineralogy was held at the Hotel Utah, Salt Lake City, in conjunction with the annual meetings of the Mineralogical Society of America. Richard A. Yund, David B. Stewart, Joseph V. Smith and Paul R. Ribbe presented workshops on x-ray single-crystal and powder diffraction methods and electron optical techniques as applied to the study of feldspars and presented eight lectures, the substance of which became the nine chapters of the first edition of Feldspar Mineralogy. That book was published by the Mineralogical Society as the second volume of its series entitled Short Course Notes. In 1980 the MSA renamed the series Reviews in Mineralogy to more accurately reflect the scope and contents of the volumes, some of which -- including Volume 5 (1st and 2nd editions), this volume and a forthcoming one on fluid inclusions --were written without presentation at a short course. It will be noted by readers experienced with feldspars that there are many new ideas appearing in Chapters 3, 4 and 5 that have neither received scrutiny by review (other than ourselves) nor survived practical tests of time in the research community. There is some danger in this, but the editor decided the greater risk was to produce a review volume soon to be outdated. Inevitably, given the different goals of individual authors in their assigned topics, some repetition of material has occurred, although usually with quite different emphases. Chapters 1, 2, 9 and 10, in which plagioclase structures and diffraction patterns and their Al,Si distributions, phase equilibria and exsolution textures are featured, are notable in this regard. The editor has attempted to cross-reference these and as many other subjects throughout the volume as feasible. This is a luxury not afforded in other books of this series produced with a short course deadline, and it, together with the detailed Table of Contents, compensates to some degree for the lack of an index. Throughout this book repeated references are made to Smith (1974a,b); these are Volumes 1 and 2 of Feldspar Minerals, an encyclopedic work written by Joseph V. Smith and published by Springer-Verlag. We are particularly indebted to Drs. Konrad Springer and H. Wiebking for permission to reproduce many figures free of charge. The editor (and hopefully this volume) benefitted greatly from numerous stimulating discussions with David B. Stewart, some of which reached a high pitch, none of which came to blows, and several of which produced some palpable scientific progress. Stewart read and criticized many of the chapters. The authors are grateful to numerous individual scientists for figures, for data in advance of publication, and for encouragement and correction.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xii, 362 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 0-939950-14-6 , 978-0-939950-14-0
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy 2
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Chemistry, Structure, and Nomenclature of Feldspars by Paul H. Ribbe, p. 1 - 20. Chapter 2. Aluminum-Silicon Order in Feldspars: Domain Textures and Diffraction Patterns by Paul H. Ribbe, p. 21 - 56. Chapter 3. Lattice Parameters, Composition, and Al/Si Order in Alkali Feldspars by Herbert Kroll and Paul H. Ribbe, p. 57 - 100. Chapter 4. Lattice Parameters and Determinative Methods for Plagioclase and Alkali Feldspars by Herbert Kroll, p. 101 - 120. Chapter 5. Optical Properties of Feldspars by David B. Stewart and Paul H. Ribbe, p. 121 - 140. CHapter 6. Subsolidus Phase Relations in the Alkali Feldspars with Emphasis on Coherent Phases by Richard A. Yund and Jan Tullis, p. 141 - 176. Chapter 7. Microstructure, Kinetics and Mechanisms of Alkali Feldspar Exsolution by Richard A. Yund, p. 177 - 202. Chapter 8. Diffusion in Feldspars by Richard A. Yund, p. 203 - 222. Chapter 9. Phase Equilibria of Plagioclase by Joeseph V. Smith, p. 223 - 240. Chapter 10. Exsolution Textures in Ternary and Plagioclase Feldspars; Interference Colors by Paul H. Ribbe, p. 241 - 270. Chapter 11. Color in Feldspars by Anne M. Hofmeister and George R. Rossman, p. 271 - 280. Chapter 12. Some Chemical Properties of Feldspars by Joseph V. Smith, p. 281 - 296. Chapter 13. Deformation of Feldspars by Jan Tullis, p. 297 - 324. Appendix. Guides to indexing Feldspar Powder Patterns p. 325 - 342.
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  • 74
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Tempe, Ariz. : Arizona State Univ.
    Signatur: M 00.0439
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xvii, 248 S.
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 75
    Signatur: S 99.0056(99/6)
    In: Terra nostra
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: VII, 334 S.
    Serie: Terra nostra 99/6
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin unten
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  • 76
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    Essex : Longman
    Signatur: M 94.0155
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XVI, 696 S. : graph. Darst.
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed., reprint
    ISBN: 0582300940
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 77
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    New York [u.a.] : Plenum Pr.
    Signatur: M 93.0588
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xi, 407 S.
    ISBN: 0306435918
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 78
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    New York [u.a.] : Springer-Verl.
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: M 93.0721 ; M 93.00038/3
    In: Advances in physical geochemistry
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: x, 273 S.
    ISBN: 038790865X
    Serie: Advances in physical geochemistry
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 79
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    Dordrecht [u.a.] : Kluwer
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    Signatur: 11/N 02.0278
    In: International tables for crystallography
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: vii, 164 S.
    Ausgabe: 5th, rev. ed., brief teaching ed.
    ISBN: 0792365917
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Lesesaal
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  • 80
    GFZ-Veröffentlichungen
    GFZ-Veröffentlichungen
    Potsdam : GeoForschungsZentrum
    Signatur: 21/STR 00/09
    Materialart: GFZ-Veröffentlichungen
    Seiten: iii, 126 S.
    Serie: Scientific technical report / Geoforschungszentrum Potsdam 00/09
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
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  • 81
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    Leipzig : Dt. Verl. für Grundstoffindustrie
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    Signatur: SR 90.0071(273)
    In: Freiberger Forschungshefte
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: 146 S. : 56 Ill., 8 graph. Darst.
    Ausgabe: 1. Aufl.
    ISBN: 3342009012
    Serie: Freiberger Forschungshefte : B 272 : Metallurgie und Werkstofftechnik, Metallkunde
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin unten
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  • 82
    Signatur: S 90.0002(1610)
    In: Professional paper
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: IX, 117 S. + 1 Kt.-Beil.
    ISBN: 0607919922
    Serie: U.S. Geological Survey professional paper 1610
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin unten
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  • 83
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    Ottawa : Mineralogical Association of Canada
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    Signatur: 11/M 02.0658
    In: Short course series
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: iv, 243 S.
    ISBN: 0921294298
    Serie: Short course series / Mineralogical Association of Canada 29
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
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  • 84
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    New York [u.a.] : Dekker
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    Signatur: M 93.0970
    In: Materials engineering
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: x, 285 S.
    ISBN: 0824789636
    Serie: Materials engineering 5
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 85
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Darmstadt : Steinkopff
    Signatur: M 93.0879
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XIV, 490 S.
    ISBN: 3798509239
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 86
    Unbekannt
    London [u.a.] : Chapman & Hall
    Signatur: 93.0672
    Seiten: LXIV, 635 S.
    Ausgabe: 3rd ed.
    ISBN: 041246750X
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 87
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: M 02.0026 / Regal 11
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Mineralogy and Geology of Natural Zeolites was published in 1977. Dr. Fred Mumpton, a leader of the natural zeolite community for more than three decades, edited the original volume. Since the time of the original MSA zeolite short course in November 1977, there have been major developments concerning almost all aspects of natural zeolites. There has been an explosion in our knowledge of the crystal chemistry and structures of natural zeolites (Chapters 1 and 2), due in part to the now-common Rietveld method that allows treatment of powder diffraction data. Studies on the geochemistry of natural zeolites have also greatly increased, partly as a result of the interests related to the disposal of radioactive wastes, and Chapters 3, 4, 5, 13, and 14 detail the latest results in this important area. Until the latter part of the 20th century, zeolites were often looked upon as a geological curiosity, but they are now known to be widespread throughout the world in sedimentary and igneous deposits and in soils (Chapters 6-12). Likewise, borrowing from new knowledge gained from studies of synthetic zeolites and properties of natural zeolites, the application of natural zeolites has greatly expanded since the first zeolite volume. Chapter 15 details the use of natural zeolites for removal of ammonium ions, heavy metals, radioactive cations, and organic molecules from natural waters, wastewaters, and soils. Similarly, Chapter 16 describes the use of natural zeolites as building blocks and cements in the building industry, Chapter 17 outlines their use in solar energy storage, heating, and cooling applications, and Chapter 18 describes their use in a variety of agricultural applications, including as soil conditioners, slow-release fertilizers, soil-less substrates, carriers for insecticides and pesticides, and remediation agents in contaminated soils. Most of the material in this volume is entirely new, and Natural Zeolites: Occurrence, Properties, Applications presents a fresh and expanded look at many of the subjects contained in Volume 4. It is our hope that this new, expanded volume will rekindle interest in this fascinating and technologically important group of minerals, in part through the 'Suggestions for Further Research' section in each chapter.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XIV, 654 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-57-X , 978-0-939950-57-7
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 45
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: MINERALOGY Chapter 1. Crystal Structures of Natural Zeolites by Thomas Armbruster and Mickey E. Gunter, p. 1 - 68 Chapter 2. The Crystal Chemistry of Zeolites by E Passaglia and Richard A. Sheppard, p. 69 - 116 Chapter 3. Geochemical Stability of Natural Zeolites by Steve J. Chipera and John A. Apps, p. 117 - 162 Chapter 4. Isotope Geochemistry of Zeolites by Haraldur R. Karlsson, p. 163 - 206 Chapter 5. Clinoptilolite-Heulandite Nomenclature by David L. Bish and Jeremy M. Boak, p. 207 - 216 OCCURRENCE Chapter 6. Occurrence of Zeolites in Sedimentary Rocks: An Overview by Richard L. Hay and Richard A. Sheppard, p. 217 - 234 Chapter 7. Zeolites in Closed Hydrologic Systems by A Langella, Piergiulio Cappelletti, and Roberto de'Gennaro, p. 235 - 260 Chapter 8. Formation of Zeolites in Open Hydrologic Systems by Richard A. Sheppard and Richard L. Hay, p. 261 - 276 Chapter 9. Zeolites in Burial Diagenesis and Low-grade Metamorphic Rocks by Minora Utada, p. 277 - 304 Chapter 10. Zeolites in Hydrothermally Altered Rocks by Minora Utada, p. 305 - 322 Chapter 11. Zeolites in Soil Environments by Douglas W. Ming and Janis L. Boettinger, p. 323 - 346 Chapter 12. Zeolites in Petroleum and Natural Gas Reservoirs by Azuma Iijima, p. 347 - 402 PHYSICOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES Chapter 13. Thermal Behavior of Natural Zeolites by David L. Bish and J. William Carey, p. 403 - 452 Chapter 14. Cation-Exchange Properties of Natural Zeolites by Roberto T. Pabalan and F. Paul Bertetti, p. 453 - 518 APPLICATIONS Chapter 15. Applications of Natural Zeolites in Water and Wastewater Treatment by Dénes Kalló, p. 519 - 550 Chapter 16. Use of Zeolitic Tuff in the Building Industry by Carmine Colella, Maurizio de'Gennaro, and Rosario Aiello, p. 551 - 588 Chapter 17. Natural Zeolites in Solar Energy - Heating, Cooling, and Energy Storage by Dimiter I. Tchernev, p. 589 - 618 Chapter 18. Use of Natural Zeolites in Agronomy, Horticulture, and Environmental Soil Remediation by Douglas W. Ming and Earl R. Allen, p. 619 - 654
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  • 88
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Boston : Acad. Press [u.a.]
    Signatur: M 92.0435
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xiii, 450 S.
    ISBN: 0127656057
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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  • 89
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Berlin [u.a.] : Springer
    Signatur: M 92.0940
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XII, 340 S.
    ISBN: 3540089829
    Originaltitel: Vvedenie v fiziku mineralov
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 90
    Signatur: S 90.0095(350)
    In: Special paper
    Materialart: Schriftenreihen ausleihbar
    Seiten: VI, 319 S.
    ISBN: 0813723507
    Serie: Special paper / Geological Society of America 350
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin unten
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  • 91
  • 92
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    London : The Geological Society
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: 11/M 99.0029
    In: Rock-forming minerals
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: 383 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed. 1996, repr.
    ISBN: 189779990X
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
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  • 93
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, DC : American Geophysical Union
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    Signatur: 5/M 98.0287
    In: Geophysical monograph
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xii, 562 S.
    ISBN: 0875900836
    Serie: Geophysical monograph 101
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
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  • 94
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Berlin [u.a.] : Springer
    Signatur: M 11.0059
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Contents:Crystal Structure - Species - Crystallisation.- Crystal Chemistry of Clay Minerals.- Energy Balances.- Isotopic Composition of Clay Minerals.- Surface Properties.- Clays in Soils and Weathered Rocks.- Clays in Sedimentary Environments.- Diagenesis and Very Low-Grade Metamorphism.- Hydrothermal Process- Thermal Metamorphism.- Clays Under Extreme Conditions
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: IX, 472 S.
    ISBN: 9783642060007
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 95
    Signatur: 11/M 13.0269
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XX, 728 S. : farb. Ill., graph. Darst.
    Ausgabe: 9., vollst. überarb. und akt. Aufl.
    ISBN: 9783642346590
    Serie: Springer-Lehrbuch
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Standort: Lesesaal
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  • 96
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press
    Signatur: M 94.0671
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xx, 457 S.
    ISBN: 0521429471
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 97
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
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    Signatur: 11/M 02.0109 ; AWI G4-98-0317 ; M 94.0169
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Volume 13 of Reviews in Mineralogy presented much of our present-day knowledge of micas. At the time of that volume (1984), I mentioned that there was too much material available to attempt to cover all of the hydrous phyllosilicates in one volume. The micas were treated first because of their abundance in nature and the fact that more detailed studies had been carried out on them than on the rest of the phyllosilicates. The serpentines, kaolins, smectites, chlorites, etc. would have to wait their turn. Now, four years later, that tum has come. Hence the peculiar nature of the title of this volume. We know less about the rest of the phyllosilicates than we do about the micas, primarily because many of them are of finer grain sizes and lower crystallinities than most of the micas. As a result, we have been unable to determine as much detail regarding their structures, crystal chemistries, and origins. Nevertheless, there is a considerable body of literature about them, and this volume will attempt to collate and evaluate that literature. One compensating factor that has helped greatly in the accumulation of knowledge about these minerals is that some of them occur in large deposits that are of great economic value and thus stimulate interest. For this reason considerable emphasis in this volume will be related to the occurrence, origin, and petrology of the minerals. S. W. Bailey, Madison, Wisconsin, USA September 1,1988 The authors of this volume presented a short course by the same title to about 120 participants in Denver, Colorado, October 29-30,1988, just prior to the 100th anniversary meeting of the Geological Society of America. S. W. ("Bull") Bailey convened the course and edited this volume, his second for Reviews in Mineralogy. Because he is retiring at the end of this academic year after 38 years' teaching at the University of Wisconsin (Madison), his colleagues, friends and I (a diligent student of "Bull" thirty years ago) agreed that it would be appropriate to dedicate this volume to him, odd though it seems to have him editing a book honoring himself. He had no advance knowledge of this dedication.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xiii, 725 S.
    Ausgabe: 2nd printing
    ISBN: 0-939950-23-5 , 978-0-939950-23-2
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy 19
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Introduction by S. W. Bailey, p. 1 - 8 Chapter 2. Polytypism of 1:1 Layer Silicates by S. W. Bailey, p. 9 - 28 Chapter 3. Kaolin Minerals: Structures and Stabilities by S. W. Bailey, p. 29 - 66 Chapter 4. Kaolin Minerals: Their Genesis and Occurrences by Haydn H. Murray, p. 67 - 90 Chapter 5. Serpentine Minerals: Structures and Petrology by Frederick J. Wick & D. S. O'Hanley, p. 91 - 168 Chapter 6. Structures and Compositions of Other Trioctahedral 1:1 Phyllosilicates by S.W. Bailey, p. 169 - 188 Chapter 7. Isotopic Studies of Phyllosilicates by Samuel M. Savin and M. Lee, p. 189 - 224 Chapter 8. Talc, Pyrophyllite, and Related Minerals by Bernard W. Evans and Stephen J. Guggenheim, p. 225 - 294 Chapter 9. Stability, Phase Relations, and Thermodynamic Properties of Chlorite and Serpentine Group Minerals by Joseph V. Chernosky, Jr., Rob G. Berman and L. Taras Bryndzia, p. 295 - 346 Chapter 10. Chlorites: Structures and Crystal Chemistry by S.W. Bailey, p. 347 - 404 Chapter 11. Chlorites: Metamorphic Petrology by Jo Laird, p. 405 - 454 Chapter 12. Vermiculite by C. de la Calle and Helene Suquet, p. 455 - 496 Chapter 13. Smectites by N. Güven, p. 497 - 560 Chapter 14. Vector Representation of Phyllosilicate Compositions by Donald M. Burt, p. 561 - 600 Chapter 15. Mixed Layer Chlorite Minerals by Robert C. Reynolds, Jr., p. 601 - 630 Chapter 16. Sepiolite and Palygorskite by Blair F. Jones and Emilio Galan Huertos, p. 631 - 674 Chapter 17. Crystal Chemistry, Classification, and Identification of Modulated Layer Silicates by Stephen J. Guggenheim and Richard A. Eggleton, p. 675 - 725
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  • 98
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
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    Signatur: 11/M 94.0172
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: The Mineralogical Society of America (MSA) sponsored a short course by this title December 1990 at the Cathedral Hill Hotel in San Francisco, California. It was organized by the editors, Jim Nicholls and Kelly Russell, and presented by the authors of this volume to about 80 participants in conjunction with the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union. Igneous petrology, in its broadest applications, treats the transfer of matter and energy from planetary interiors to their exteriors. Over the past several decades igneous petrology has gained sophistication in three areas that deal with such transfers: the properties of silicate melts and solids can be estimated as functions of pressure, temperature and composition; some results of experimental and theoretical studies of the physics of multiphase flow are available; and many of the algorithms for realistically modeling magmatic processes are in place. Each of these fields of study, to some extent, have to be pursued independently. In our opinion, now is an ideal time to collect some features of these studies as preparation for more integrated future work and to show some consequences of applying current ideas to the study of igneous processes. We have attempted to bring together the basic data and fundamental theoretical constraints on magmatic processes with applications to specific problems in igneous petrology.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: viii, 314 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-29-4 , 978-0-939950-29-4
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Serie: Reviews in mineralogy 24
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Chapter 1. Principles of Thermodynamic Modeling of Igneous Processes by James Nicholls, p. 1 - 24 Chapter 2. Thermodynamic Properties of Silicate Liquids with Emphasis on Density, Thermal Expansion and Compressibility by Rebecca L. Lange and Ian S. E. Carmichael, p. 25 - 64 Chapter 3. Simulation of Igneous Differentiation Processes by Roger L. Nielsen, p. 65 - 106 Chapter 4. The Mathematics of Fluid Flow and a Simple Application to Problems of Magma Transport by James Nicholls, p. 107 - 124 Chapter 5. Physical Processes in the Evolution of Magmas by Stephen Tait and Claude Jaupart, p. 125 - 152 Chapter 6. Magma Mixing Processes: Insights and Constraints from Thermodynamic Calculations by J. Kelly Russell, p. 153 - 190 Chapter 7. Controls on Oxidation-Reduction Relations in Magmas by Ian S. E. Carmichael and Mark S. Ghiorso, p. 191 - 212 Chapter 8. Dynamics of Eruptive Phenomena by Claude Jaupart and Stephen Tait, p. 213 - 238 Chapter 9. Melt Fraction Diagrams: The Link between Chemical and Transport Models by George Bergantz, p. 239 - 258 Chapter 10. Textural Constraints on the Kinetics of Crystallization of Igneous Rocks by Katherine V. Cashman, p. 259 - 314
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  • 99
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    Monographie ausleihbar
    Athens : Theophrastus Publ.
    Signatur: M 94.0312
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: VII, 216 S.
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
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  • 100
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    New York [u.a.] : Oxford Univ. Press
    Signatur: M 94.0585
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: ix, 441 S.
    ISBN: 0195044428
    Klassifikation:
    Mineralogie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort: Kompaktmagazin oben
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
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