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On Some Simple Massive Minerals (Crystalline Rocks) from India and Australia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2018
Extract
In recent years, the respective provinces of Mineralogy and Petrography have become much more clearly defined than was formerly the case. We no longer include uncrystallised substances, like obsidian, taehylyto and coals among mineral species; and, on the other hand, we recognise the fact that many materials originally analysed and treated as homogeneous—such as lapis-lazuli, emery, and many similar materials—are really mineral aggregates or rocks, and thus come within the domain of the petrographer. This last advantage has been one of the most important of those which have resulted from the application of the microscope to the study of inorganic bodies.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Mineralogical magazine and journal of the Mineralogical Society , Volume 11 , Issue 50 , September 1895 , pp. 56 - 63
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1895
References
page 57 note 1 Records of the Geological Survey of India, Vol. V. p. 20, and Vol. VL p, 43,. Also, Manual of the Geology of India, Mineralogy, p. 48.
page 62 note 1 No attempt was made to separate the Fee from any Fe2O3 that might have been present.
page 62 note 2 A secoud determination of the boric acid gave 9.11.
page 62 note 3 Am. Jour. Sci., Vol. XXXV. (1888), p. 35.