Mineral hydration (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Mineral hydration" in English language version.

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doi.org

  • Rivkin, A.S.; Howell, E.S.; Vilas, F.; Lebofsky, L.A. (2002). Hydrated Minerals on Asteroids: The Astronomical Record (PDF). doi:10.2307/j.ctv1v7zdn4.23. ISBN 9780816522811. Retrieved 2018-03-10. Hydrated minerals include both silicates and nonsilicates in the scope of this review. Phyllosilicates (or "clay minerals") are commonly found on Earth as weathering products of rocks or in hydrothermal systems. Nonsilicate hydrated minerals include such species as the oxides brucite and goethite, the carbonate hydromagnesite, and the sulfide tochilinite, each of which is known in the meteorite collection (Rubin, 1996). Although a full discussion of the petrogenesis and classification of hydrated minerals is beyond the scope of this paper, we note that formation of hydrated minerals, particularly clay minerals, occurs rapidly and easily in environments where anhydrous rock and water are together. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Snellings, R.; Mertens G.; Elsen J. (2012). "Supplementary cementitious materials". Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry. 74 (1): 211–278. Bibcode:2012RvMG...74..211S. doi:10.2138/rmg.2012.74.6.

handbookofmineralogy.org

  • Handbook of mineralogy (2005). "Tochilinite" (PDF). handbookofmineralogy.org. Retrieved 16 February 2023.

harvard.edu

ui.adsabs.harvard.edu

mindat.org

rruff.info

usra.edu

lpi.usra.edu

  • Rivkin, A.S.; Howell, E.S.; Vilas, F.; Lebofsky, L.A. (2002). Hydrated Minerals on Asteroids: The Astronomical Record (PDF). doi:10.2307/j.ctv1v7zdn4.23. ISBN 9780816522811. Retrieved 2018-03-10. Hydrated minerals include both silicates and nonsilicates in the scope of this review. Phyllosilicates (or "clay minerals") are commonly found on Earth as weathering products of rocks or in hydrothermal systems. Nonsilicate hydrated minerals include such species as the oxides brucite and goethite, the carbonate hydromagnesite, and the sulfide tochilinite, each of which is known in the meteorite collection (Rubin, 1996). Although a full discussion of the petrogenesis and classification of hydrated minerals is beyond the scope of this paper, we note that formation of hydrated minerals, particularly clay minerals, occurs rapidly and easily in environments where anhydrous rock and water are together. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)