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      • Gmelinite was named as a single species in 1825 after Christian Gottlob Gmelin (1792–1860) professor of chemistry and mineralogist from Tübingen, Germany, and in 1997 it was raised to the status of a series.
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  1. Gmelinite was named as a single species in 1825 after Christian Gottlob Gmelin (1792–1860) professor of chemistry and mineralogist from Tübingen, Germany, and in 1997 it was raised to the status of a series.

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  3. Gmelinite was defined and named in 1825 by David Brewster in honor of Christian Gottlob Gmelin (1792-1860), a mineralogist and chemist at the University of Tübingen, Germany. Gmelinite AUCTIONS. Detailed description, properties, locality information guide about the zeolite mineral gmelinite.

  4. gmelinite, hydrated sodium aluminosilicate mineral in the zeolite family [(Na 2,Ca)Al 2 Si 4 O 12 ·6H 2 O]. Its crystal structure and chemical composition are similar to those of chabazite ( q.v. ), with which it is commonly found.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. 01. Gmelinite is a zeolite mineral that forms in hexagonal crystals. Its structure is composed of interconnected silica and alumina tetrahedra, creating a porous framework. 02. Named after Christian Gmelin, a German chemist, this mineral was first identified in 1825.

  6. Gmelinite was named for the German chemist and mineralogist Christian Gottlob Gmelin (1792-1860). Gmelinite was originally described from Montecchio Maggiore, Vicenza Province, Veneto, Italy and Little Deerpark Quarry, Glenarm, Co. Antrim, Northern Ireland, UK.

  7. Named after the German mineralogist and chemist, Christian Gottlob Gmelin (1792-1860) of Tübingen, Germany. The suffix indicates the dominant extra-framework cation. In 1997, the name gmelinite (without suffix) was promoted from species to series and gmelinite-K was defined as one of several species.

  8. Gmelinite was named as a single species in 1825 after Christian Gottlob Gmelin (1792–1860) professor of chemistry and mineralogist from Tübingen, Germany, and in 1997 it was raised to the status of a series.

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