What we found on the web about Argentite
Argentite was primarily treated as a mineral belonging to the galena group, cubic silver sulfide (Ag 2 S), occasionally found as uneven cubes and octahedra, but more often as ...
The name argentite refers to a cubic form, which, due to instability in "normal" temperatures, is found in form of the pseudomorphosis of acanthite after argentite.
This page was last modified on 14 July 2009, at 22:23. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License; additional terms may apply.
ARGENTITE, a mineral which belongs to the galena group, and is cubic silver sulphide (Ag 2 S). It is occasionally found as uneven cubes and octahedra, but more often as dendritic ...
3910 Argentite Way is a beautiful home with tons of space, character, charm and is waiting for you to make it your own. All reasonable offers will be considered so come take a ...
Argentite is a naturally occurring form of silver sulfide, {\rm Ag}_2{\rm S}. When heated on charcoal, it yields a small mass of silver metal. The name argentite and the chemical ...
Acanthite is the low-temperature modification of silver sulphide. All natural silver sulphide specimens at room temperature are acanthite. The structure of argentite, the high ...
A selection of articles related to argentite ... Dream Sharing Forum at Global Oneness Community. Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Britannica online encyclopedia article on argentite (mineral), Argentite is the high-temperature form of acanthite. Like several other sulfides, selenides, and tellurides of silver ...
Here is what users have to say about Argentite

Argentite-unit-cell-3D-balls.png

Argentite was primarily treated as a mineral belonging to the galena group, cubic silver sulfide (Ag2S), occasionally found as uneven cubes and octahedra, but more often as dendritic or earthy masses, with a blackish lead-grey color and metallic lustre. All these forms are structurally not argentite, but its monoclinic polymorph, acanthite. Due to instability in normal air temperature, the IMA commision decided to reject this mineral, which now is a discredited mineral species. The cubic cleavage, which is so prominent a feature in galena, here present only in traces. The mineral is perfectly sectile and has a shining streak; hardness 2.5, specific gravity 7.3. It occurs in mineral veins, and when found in large masses, as in is Mexico and in the Comstock Lode in Nevada, it forms an important ore of silver. The mineral was mentioned 1529 by G. Agricola, but the name argentite (from the Lat. argentum, silver) was not used till 1845 and is due to W. Haidinger. Old names for the species are Glaserz, silver-glance and vitreous silver. A related Cu-rich mineral occurring i.e. in Jalpa, Mexico, is known as jalpaite.

Welcome to CWAnswers

CWAnswers is your guide to the sprawling world wide web. The directory aims to provide a useful guide made by users. You can share your knowledge as well - simply register and edit your first entry. For questions just contact the team at support - at - cwanswers.com.

Weblinks

Top 10

Things you find nowhere else.

Comments

You must be logged in to post a comment.

No comments yet on this topic. Be the first one!