seamanite
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seamanite
Summary
seamanite is a mineral species[1]. seamanite draws 6 Wikipedia views per month (mineral_species category, ranking #168 of 1,431).[2]
Key Facts
- seamanite is credited with the discovery of Arthur Edmund Seaman[3].
- seamanite's image is recorded as Seamanite13290a.jpg[4].
- seamanite's instance of is recorded as mineral species[5].
- Arthur Edmund Seaman is named after seamanite[6].
- seamanite's subclass of is recorded as borate class of minerals[7].
- seamanite's Commons category is recorded as Seamanite[8].
- seamanite's streak color is recorded as white[9].
- seamanite's crystal system is recorded as orthorhombic crystal system[10].
- seamanite's IMA status and/or rank is recorded as grandfathered mineral (G)[11].
- seamanite's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0f3y13[12].
- seamanite's space group is recorded as space group Pbnm[13].
- seamanite's Strunz 8th edition is recorded as Vc/A.07[14].
- seamanite's Nickel-Strunz 9th edition is recorded as 6.AC.65[15].
- seamanite's Nickel-Strunz '10th ed', review of is recorded as 6.AC.65[16].
- seamanite's described by source is recorded as Seamanite, a new manganese phosphoborate from Iron County, Michigan[17].
- seamanite's type locality is recorded as Iron County[18].
- seamanite's Wolfram Language entity code is recorded as Entity["Mineral", "Seamanite"][19].
- seamanite's Mindat mineral ID is recorded as 17870[20].
- seamanite's IMA Mineral Symbol is recorded as Sem[21].
Body
Works and Contributions
seamanite is credited with the discovery of Arthur Edmund Seaman[3].
Why It Matters
seamanite draws 6 Wikipedia views per month (mineral_species category, ranking #168 of 1,431).[2] seamanite has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22]