Reciprocal Net Site sponsor
   Site Info    |    Search
Common molecules sample 50103 - Reciprocal Net Log in
 no CRT file available
Empirical formula: Fe(CO3)
a: 4.692 Å
b: 4.692 Å
c: 15.380 Å
α (alpha): 90.00 °
β (beta): 90.00 °
γ (gamma): 120.00 °
Volume: 293.17 Å3
Space group: R-3c
Z: 6
R(F): 0.0130
Common name: Siderite
Short description: Siderite can be found growing in sedimentary and hydrothermal environments
Keyword: rhombohedron
Keyword: calcite
ICSD collection code: 100678
Citation of a publication: Reference: Zeitschrift fuer Kristallographie 156 (1981) p233 Authors: Effenberger, H, Mereiter, K, Zemann, J
IUPAC name: Iron carbonate
Layman's explanation: Siderite was found by a man named Haidinger in 1845. The word Siderite is derived from the word Sideros, meaning iron in Greek. Siderite is found in many different places all over the world: the United States, Australia, Germany, Peru, and Greenland are just a few. This mineral is used mostly in North America and Germany. Properties of siderite are as follows: it is a carbonate of iron, has a hexagonal crystal structure, has the color grayish-brown when crystals a large, and has the color orange-yellow when crystals are small.
Lab name: Common molecules
Sample provider: Obtained from the Inorganic Crystal Structure Database
Status: Complete, visible to public
No files for 50103 in repository!

Reciprocal Net site software 0.9.1-50, copyright (c) 2002-2009, The Trustees of Indiana University
Files and data presented via this software are property of their respective owners.
Reciprocal Net is funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation as part of the National Science Digital Library project. NSDL