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  2. Strontium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strontium

    Before World War I the beet sugar industry used 100,000 to 150,000 tons of strontium hydroxide for this process per year. [42] The strontium hydroxide was recycled in the process, but the demand to substitute losses during production was high enough to create a significant demand initiating mining of strontianite in the Münsterland .

  3. Strontian process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strontian_process

    A further place the strontian process came to be used was the Sugar Factory Rositz (in Rositz). [citation needed] Yet by 1883, the demand for strontianite had begun to shrink. First, it was replaced by another strontium mineral , that could be imported from England, in a cheaper way. Second, the prices for sugar decreased so much, that the ...

  4. Category:Strontium minerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Strontium_minerals

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  5. Strontianite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strontianite

    Although good mineral specimens of strontianite are rare, strontium is a fairly common element, with abundance in the Earth's crust of 370 parts per million by weight, 87 parts per million by moles, much more common than copper with only 60 parts per million by weight, 19 by moles. [6] Strontium is never found free in nature.

  6. Isotopes of strontium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotopes_of_strontium

    The ratio 87 Sr/ 86 Sr is the parameter typically reported in geologic investigations; [4] ratios in minerals and rocks have values ranging from about 0.7 to greater than 4.0 (see rubidium–strontium dating). Because strontium has an electron configuration similar to that of calcium, it readily substitutes for calcium in minerals.

  7. Portal:Minerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Minerals

    Talc in powdered form, often combined with corn starch, is used as baby powder. This mineral is used as a thickening agent and lubricant. It is an ingredient in ceramics, paints, and roofing material. It is a main ingredient in many cosmetics. It occurs as foliated to fibrous masses, and in an exceptionally rare crystal form.

  8. Lulzacite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lulzacite

    Lulzacite is a strontium-containing phosphate mineral with the chemical formula Sr 2 Fe 2+ (Fe 2+,Mg) 2 Al 4 (PO 4) 4 (OH) 10. [2] [3]The mineral was first described in 2000 from quartzite deposits at Saint-Aubin-des-Châteaux, Loire-Atlantique, France, and is named after Y. Lulzac, a French geologist who discovered the mineral

  9. Strontiofluorite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strontiofluorite

    Strontiofluorite is a halide mineral that contains the alkali earth metal strontium and the halogen fluorine, a form of strontium fluoride. It can be considered a strontium-analogue of fluorite, which contains calcium as the dominant cation instead. It is translucent and pale gray in colour. It appears as cubo-octahedral crystals up to a size ...