Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kamacite> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 70 of
70
with 100 items per page.
- Kamacite abstract "Kamacite is an alloy of iron and nickel, which is found on earth only in meteorites. The proportion iron:nickel is between 90:10 to 95:5; small quantities of other elements, such as cobalt or carbon may also be present. The mineral has a metallic luster, is gray and has no clear cleavage although the structure is isometric-hexoctahedral. Its density is around 8 g/cm³ and its hardness is 4 on the Mohs scale. It is also sometimes called balkeneisen.The name was coined in 1861 and is derived from the Greek kamask (lath or beam). It is a major constituent of iron meteorites (octahedrite and hexahedrite types). In the octahedrites it is found in bands interleaving with taenite forming Widmanstätten patterns. In hexahedrites, fine parallel lines called Neumann lines are often seen, which are evidence for structural deformation of adjacent kamacite plates due to shock from impacts.At times kamacite can be found so closely intermixed with taenite that it is difficult to distinguish them visually, forming plessite. The largest documented kamacite crystal measured 92×54×23 centimetres (36.2×21.3×9.1 in).".
- Kamacite thumbnail Widmanstatten_hand.jpg?width=300.
- Kamacite wikiPageID "17013".
- Kamacite wikiPageRevisionID "598023227".
- Kamacite caption "Widmanstätten pattern showing the two forms of nickel-iron minerals, kamacite and taenite".
- Kamacite category "Meteorite mineral".
- Kamacite cleavage "Indistinct".
- Kamacite color "Iron black, steel gray".
- Kamacite formula "α-; Fe0+0.9Ni0.1".
- Kamacite fracture "Hackly - Jagged, torn surfaces, .".
- Kamacite gravity "7.9".
- Kamacite habit "Massive - uniformly indistinguishable crystals forming large masses".
- Kamacite hasPhotoCollection Kamacite.
- Kamacite luster "metallic".
- Kamacite mohs "4".
- Kamacite molweight "56.13".
- Kamacite name "Kamacite".
- Kamacite other "non-radioactive, magnetic, non-fluorescent.".
- Kamacite streak "gray".
- Kamacite strunz "1".
- Kamacite system "180.0".
- Kamacite subject Category:Iron_minerals.
- Kamacite subject Category:Meteorite_minerals.
- Kamacite subject Category:Native_element_minerals.
- Kamacite subject Category:Nickel_minerals.
- Kamacite type Abstraction100002137.
- Kamacite type IronMinerals.
- Kamacite type Material114580897.
- Kamacite type Matter100020827.
- Kamacite type MeteoriteMinerals.
- Kamacite type Mineral114662574.
- Kamacite type NativeElementMinerals.
- Kamacite type NickelMinerals.
- Kamacite type Part113809207.
- Kamacite type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Kamacite type Relation100031921.
- Kamacite type Substance100019613.
- Kamacite type ChemicalSubstance.
- Kamacite type Mineral.
- Kamacite type ChemicalObject.
- Kamacite type Thing.
- Kamacite comment "Kamacite is an alloy of iron and nickel, which is found on earth only in meteorites. The proportion iron:nickel is between 90:10 to 95:5; small quantities of other elements, such as cobalt or carbon may also be present. The mineral has a metallic luster, is gray and has no clear cleavage although the structure is isometric-hexoctahedral. Its density is around 8 g/cm³ and its hardness is 4 on the Mohs scale.".
- Kamacite label "Camacita".
- Kamacite label "Camacite".
- Kamacite label "Camacite".
- Kamacite label "Kamacit".
- Kamacite label "Kamacite".
- Kamacite label "Kamacite".
- Kamacite label "Kamacyt".
- Kamacite label "Nikkelijzer".
- Kamacite label "كاماسيت".
- Kamacite label "カマサイト".
- Kamacite label "錐紋石".
- Kamacite sameAs Kamacit.
- Kamacite sameAs Camacita.
- Kamacite sameAs Kamacite.
- Kamacite sameAs Camacite.
- Kamacite sameAs カマサイト.
- Kamacite sameAs 카마사이트.
- Kamacite sameAs Nikkelijzer.
- Kamacite sameAs Kamacyt.
- Kamacite sameAs Camacite.
- Kamacite sameAs m.04bnj.
- Kamacite sameAs Q430026.
- Kamacite sameAs Q430026.
- Kamacite sameAs Kamacite.
- Kamacite wasDerivedFrom Kamacite?oldid=598023227.
- Kamacite depiction Widmanstatten_hand.jpg.
- Kamacite isPrimaryTopicOf Kamacite.
- Kamacite name "Kamacite".