Alan wrote :
>Yes of course. But as Uwe Kolitsch pointed out the structure to which Armel refers is
>in fact in ICSD, which should be the first place to look, since it contains many more
>entries than any of these other databases - 59,482 on the UK central server
>http://cds3.dl.ac.uk/dif/icsd
At 14:20 10/02/2001, Armel wrote:
>Thanks to these many mineral databases available for free on
>the Internet !! Think to them !
Yes of course. But as Uwe Kolitsch pointed out the structure to which Armel
refers is in fact in ICSD, which should be the first place to look, since
it contains many
In the latest edition of the ICSD there is actually the entry of
khademite you found (Bachet et al., 1981). The ICSD collection
code is 41-562.
Cheers, Uwe
>>
Dr. Uwe Kolitsch
Institut für Mineralogie und Kristallographie
Geozentrum
Universit
In the series of dark database stories, below is a new one.
Trying (this week) to identify a mineralogical sample,
I had a clearly positive match with the 26-1011, 41-1382
and 42-1427 JCPDS-ICDD cards,
Formula Al(SO4)(OH,F).5H2O, rostite, or khademite (if F
only). Note that the 41-1382 is