spurrite
nesosilicate mineral
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
spurrite
Summary
spurrite is a mineral species[1]. spurrite draws 1 Wikipedia views per month (mineral_species category, ranking #173 of 1,431).[2]
Key Facts
- spurrite's image is recorded as Spurrite-540261.jpg[3].
- spurrite's instance of is recorded as mineral species[4].
- Josiah E. Spurr is named after spurrite[5].
- spurrite's chemical formula is recorded as Ca₅(SiO₄)₂(CO₃)[6].
- spurrite's subclass of is recorded as spurrite-afwillite mineral group[7].
- spurrite's Commons category is recorded as Spurrite[8].
- spurrite's streak color is recorded as white[9].
- spurrite's IMA status and/or rank is recorded as grandfathered mineral (G)[10].
- spurrite's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03grp_d[11].
- spurrite's Strunz 8th edition is recorded as VIII/A’.06a[12].
- spurrite's Nickel-Strunz 9th edition is recorded as 9.AH.15[13].
- spurrite's Nickel-Strunz '10th ed', review of is recorded as 9.AH.15[14].
- spurrite's Dana 8th edition is recorded as 53.1.1.1[15].
- spurrite's Mohs' hardness is recorded as {'amount': '+5'}[16].
- spurrite's described by source is recorded as On three contact minerals from Valardeña, Durango, Mexico. (Gehlenite, spurrite and hillebrandite)[17].
- spurrite's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2780161831[18].
- spurrite's Kivid.info ID is recorded as 1526[19].
- spurrite's IMA Mineral Symbol is recorded as Spu[20].
Why It Matters
spurrite draws 1 Wikipedia views per month (mineral_species category, ranking #173 of 1,431).[2] spurrite has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21]