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Pictured above is smithsonite, a zinc carbonate mineral that was named after James Smithson (c. 1765–1829), a British chemist, mineralogist, and the founding donor of the Smithsonian Institution.
A specimen of smithsonite housed in the museum’s mineral and gem collection. Jack Tamisiea, NMNH With more than 148 million specimens and objects, the vast majority of the National Museum of ...
Concurrently, research addressing the influence of lead ion pretreatment on smithsonite has elucidated ... the electrical charge on the surface of mineral particles which influences their ...
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New Mexico lawmakers look to name official state mineralHouse Bill 411 would amend a law covering other official state symbols, such as the official state bird and flower, and add Smithsonite as the official mineral of New Mexico. The bill has passed ...
The minerals are on display at the New Mexico Mineral Museum. The recognition of new minerals comes as the Legislature considers a bill to make smithsonite the mineral for New Mexico. House Bill ...
More than 100 people gathered to tour the exhibits on Smithson (including a sample of his most notable discovery, the mineral Smithsonite) and to see his small tomb near the entrance of the castle.
The mineral occurs in cavities, most often in fluorite, as a brick-red deposit associated with smithsonite (ZnCO 3) and iron-staining, and under the microscope appears as minute red specks dusting ...
A mineral formerly called calamine and now called smithsonite (after the man whose money was used to found the Smithsonian), this astringent was used in the old days to dry up skin lesions.
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