curite
English
Etymology
From Curie (“a surname”) + -ite, after Pierre Curie and/or his wife Marie, early researchers of radioactivity — the ore being radioactive by virtue of its uranium content.
Noun
curite (usually uncountable, plural curites)
- (mineralogy) An orthorhombic-dipyramidal mineral containing hydrogen, lead, oxygen, and uranium.
- 1956, Walter Fred Hunt (editor), American Mineralogist, volume 41, page 555:
- The color is lighter than that of curite.
- 1962, Thomas Arthur Rickard (editor), The Mining Magazine, Volumes 106-107, page 9,
- The present note relates to the behaviour of uranium minerals such as uraninite, curite, and uranophane in high-tension separators.
- 1982, R. W. Boyle, Geochemical Prospecting for Thorium and Uranium Deposits, Elsevier, Developments in Economic Geology: 16, page 68,
- Yellow, orange, greenish, and bluish oxidation products of uranium and copper comprising gummite and containing minerals such as curite, liebigite, malachite and azurite may be developed locally in the oxidized rubble and gossans.
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References
- “Curite” in David Barthelmy, Webmineral Mineralogy Database, 1997–.
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