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VIII.—On the Optical Figures produced by the Disintegrated Surfaces of Crystals
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2013
Extract
There is no branch of natural science about which we know so little as that which relates to the structure of crystalline bodies. By assuming the form of an integrant molecule, crystallographers have found no difficulty in building those geometrical solids which minerals and artificial crystals present to our observation. They conceive that these molecules unite by their homologous sides in the formation of the primitive crystal, and by supposing that they arrange themselves in plates on the faces of that crystal, each plate successively diminishing in size by the abstraction of a certain number of these molecules in lines of a given direction,—all the secondary forms of the crystal may be easily deduced.
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- Transactions
- Information
- Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh , Volume 14 , Issue 1 , 1839 , pp. 164 - 175
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1839
References
page 166 note * Plate 44, Fig. 1, &c., first edition.
page 170 note * This is the case with all the optical figures previously described.
page 172 note * The brightest part of the figure was a b, the part above a being faint.
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