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{{Short description|Calcium carbonate mineral}} | {{Short description|Calcium carbonate mineral}} | ||
] | |||
{{Infobox mineral | |||
| name = Aragonite | |||
| category = ] / ] | |||
| boxwidth = | |||
| boxbgcolor = | |||
| image = Aragonite Salsigne France.jpg | |||
| caption = Aragonite from Salsigne mine, ], ], France; size: 30×30×20 cm | |||
| formula = CaCO<sub>3</sub> | |||
|IMAsymbol=Arg<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Warr|first=L.N.|date=2021|title=IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols|journal=Mineralogical Magazine|volume=85|issue=3|pages=291–320|doi=10.1180/mgm.2021.43|bibcode=2021MinM...85..291W|s2cid=235729616|doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
| molweight = | |||
| strunz = 5.AB.15 | |||
| system = ] | |||
| class = Dipyramidal (mmm) <br/>]: (2/m 2/m 2/m) | |||
| symmetry = ''Pmcn'' | |||
| unit cell = ''a'' = 4.95 Å, ''b'' = 7.96 Å<br/> ''c'' = 5.74 Å; ''Z'' = 4 | |||
| color = White, red, yellow, orange, green, purple, grey, blue and brown | |||
| habit = Pseudohexagonal, prismatic crystals, acicular, columnar, globular, reniform, pisolitic, coralloidal, stalactitic, internally banded | |||
| twinning = Polysynthetic parallel to {100} cyclically on {110} | |||
| cleavage = Distinct on {010}, imperfect {110} and {011} | |||
| fracture = Subconchoidal | |||
| tenacity = Brittle | |||
| mohs = 3.5–4 | |||
| luster = Vitreous, resinous on fracture surfaces | |||
| refractive = ''n''<sub>α</sub> = 1.529–1.530,<br/> ''n''<sub>β</sub> = 1.680–1.682,<br/> ''n''<sub>γ</sub> = 1.685–1.686 | |||
| opticalprop = Biaxial (−); high ] | |||
| 2V = 18° | |||
| birefringence = δ = 0.156 | |||
| pleochroism = | |||
| streak = White | |||
| gravity = 2.95 | |||
| density = | |||
| melt = | |||
| fusibility = | |||
| diagnostic = | |||
| solubility = Dilute acid | |||
| diaphaneity = Translucent to transparent | |||
| other = Fluorescence: pale rose, yellow, white or bluish; phosphorescence: greenish or white (LW UV); yellowish (SW UV) | |||
| references = <ref name=Mindat>. Mindat.org.</ref><ref name=Handbook>.</ref><ref name=Webmin>. Mineralogy Database.</ref> | |||
}} | |||
'''Aragonite''' is a ], one of the three most common naturally occurring ] of ], {{Chem2|]]}} (the other forms being the ]s ] and ]). It is formed by biological and physical processes, including precipitation from marine and freshwater environments. | '''Aragonite''' is a ], one of the three most common naturally occurring ] of ], {{Chem2|]]}} (the other forms being the ]s ] and ]). It is formed by biological and physical processes, including precipitation from marine and freshwater environments. | ||
] | ] | ||
The ] of aragonite differs from that of calcite, resulting in a different crystal shape, an ] with ]. Repeated ] results in pseudo-hexagonal forms. Aragonite may be columnar or fibrous, occasionally in branching ] forms called ''flos-ferri'' ("flowers of iron") from their association with the ]s at the ] iron mines.<ref name=Sinkankas>{{cite book |last1=Sinkankas |first1=John |title=Mineralogy for amateurs. |date=1964 |publisher=Van Nostrand |location=Princeton, N.J. |isbn=0442276249 |pages=371–372}}</ref> | The ] of aragonite differs from that of ], resulting in a different crystal shape, an ] with ]<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Bragg |first=William Lawrence |date=1924-01 |title=The structure of aragonite |url=https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspa.1924.0002 |journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character |language=en |volume=105 |issue=729 |pages=16–39 |doi=10.1098/rspa.1924.0002 |issn=0950-1207}}</ref>. Repeated ] results in pseudo-hexagonal forms. Aragonite may be columnar or fibrous, occasionally in branching ] forms called ''flos-ferri'' ("flowers of iron") from their association with the ]s at the ] iron mines.<ref name=Sinkankas>{{cite book |last1=Sinkankas |first1=John |title=Mineralogy for amateurs. |date=1964 |publisher=Van Nostrand |location=Princeton, N.J. |isbn=0442276249 |pages=371–372}}</ref> | ||
==Occurrence== | ==Occurrence== | ||
The ] for aragonite is ] in the ] in ], ], for which it was named in 1797.<ref name="Cairncross2015">{{cite book | title=Understanding Minerals & Crystals | publisher=Struik Nature | last1=Cairncross | first1=B. | last2=McCarthy | first2=T. | year=2015 | location=Cape Town | page=187 | isbn=978-1-43170-084-4}}</ref> Aragonite is found in this locality as cyclic twins inside gypsum and marls of the ] facies of the ].<ref>{{Cite book|title=Minerales y Minas de España. Vol. V. Carbonatos y Nitratos|last=Calvo|first=Miguel|publisher=Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros de Minas de Madrid. Fundación Gómez Pardo|year=2012|isbn=978-84-95063-98-4|location=Madrid|pages=314–398}}</ref> This type of aragonite deposit is very common in Spain, and there are also some in France.<ref name=Sinkankas/> | The ] for aragonite is ] in the ] in ], ], for which it was named in 1797.<ref name="Cairncross2015">{{cite book | title=Understanding Minerals & Crystals | publisher=Struik Nature | last1=Cairncross | first1=B. | last2=McCarthy | first2=T. | year=2015 | location=Cape Town | page=187 | isbn=978-1-43170-084-4}}</ref> Aragonite is found in this locality as cyclic twins inside ] and marls of the ] facies of the ].<ref>{{Cite book|title=Minerales y Minas de España. Vol. V. Carbonatos y Nitratos|last=Calvo|first=Miguel|publisher=Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros de Minas de Madrid. Fundación Gómez Pardo|year=2012|isbn=978-84-95063-98-4|location=Madrid|pages=314–398}}</ref> This type of aragonite deposit is very common in Spain, and there are also some in France.<ref name=Sinkankas/> | ||
An aragonite cave, the ], is situated in ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Pukanská |first1=Katarína |last2=Bartoš |first2=Karol |last3=Bella |first3=Pavel |last4=Gašinec |first4=Juraj |last5=Blistan |first5=Peter |last6=Kovanič |first6=Ľudovít |title=Surveying and High-Resolution Topography of the Ochtiná Aragonite Cave Based on TLS and Digital Photogrammetry |journal=Applied Sciences |date=4 July 2020 |volume=10 |issue=13 |pages=4633 |doi=10.3390/app10134633|doi-access=free }}</ref> | An aragonite cave, the ], is situated in ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Pukanská |first1=Katarína |last2=Bartoš |first2=Karol |last3=Bella |first3=Pavel |last4=Gašinec |first4=Juraj |last5=Blistan |first5=Peter |last6=Kovanič |first6=Ľudovít |title=Surveying and High-Resolution Topography of the Ochtiná Aragonite Cave Based on TLS and Digital Photogrammetry |journal=Applied Sciences |date=4 July 2020 |volume=10 |issue=13 |pages=4633 |doi=10.3390/app10134633|doi-access=free }}</ref> | ||
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Massive deposits of ] are found on the seabed in the ].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Newell|first1=Norman D.|last2=Purdy|first2=Edward G.|last3=Imbrie|first3=John|date=1960|title=Bahamian Oölitic Sand|url=https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/626683|journal=The Journal of Geology|volume=68|issue=5|pages=481–497|doi=10.1086/626683|bibcode=1960JG.....68..481N|s2cid=129571671|issn=0022-1376}}</ref> | Massive deposits of ] are found on the seabed in the ].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Newell|first1=Norman D.|last2=Purdy|first2=Edward G.|last3=Imbrie|first3=John|date=1960|title=Bahamian Oölitic Sand|url=https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/626683|journal=The Journal of Geology|volume=68|issue=5|pages=481–497|doi=10.1086/626683|bibcode=1960JG.....68..481N|s2cid=129571671|issn=0022-1376}}</ref> | ||
Aragonite is the high pressure polymorph of calcium carbonate. As such, it occurs in high pressure metamorphic rocks such as those formed at ].<ref name=Nesse>{{cite book |last1=Nesse |first1=William D. |title=Introduction to mineralogy |date=2000 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=New York |isbn=9780195106916 |pages=336–337}}</ref> | Aragonite is the high pressure ] of ]. As such, it occurs in high pressure metamorphic rocks such as those formed at ].<ref name=Nesse>{{cite book |last1=Nesse |first1=William D. |title=Introduction to mineralogy |date=2000 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=New York |isbn=9780195106916 |pages=336–337}}</ref> | ||
Aragonite forms naturally in almost all ] shells, and as the calcareous endoskeleton of warm- and cold-water ]s (]). Several ] have aragonitic tubes.<ref name=Boggs>{{cite book |last1=Boggs |first1=Sam |title=Principles of sedimentology and stratigraphy |date=2006 |publisher=Pearson Prentice Hall |location=Upper Saddle River, N.J. |isbn=0131547283 |edition=4th |pages=161–164}}</ref> Because the mineral deposition in mollusk shells is strongly biologically controlled,<ref name=BelcherEtAl>{{cite journal |last1=Belcher |first1=A. M. |last2=Wu |first2=X. H. |last3=Christensen |first3=R. J. |last4=Hansma |first4=P. K. |last5=Stucky |first5=G. D. |last6=Morse |first6=D. E. |title=Control of crystal phase switching and orientation by soluble mollusc-shell proteins |journal=Nature |date=May 1996 |volume=381 |issue=6577 |pages=56–58 |doi=10.1038/381056a0|bibcode=1996Natur.381...56B |s2cid=4285912 }}</ref> some crystal forms are distinctively different from those of inorganic aragonite.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Chateigner |first1=D. |last2=Ouhenia |first2=S. |last3=Krauss |first3=C. |last4=Belkhir |first4=M. |last5=Morales |first5=M. |title=Structural distortion of biogenic aragonite in strongly textured mollusc shell layers |journal=Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms |date=February 2010 |volume=268 |issue=3–4 |pages=341–345 |doi=10.1016/j.nimb.2009.07.007|bibcode=2010NIMPB.268..341C }}</ref> In some mollusks, the entire shell is aragonite;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Loftus |first1=Emma |last2=Rogers |first2=Keith |last3=Lee-Thorp |first3=Julia |title=A simple method to establish calcite:aragonite ratios in archaeological mollusc shells: CALCITE:ARAGONITE IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SHELLS |journal=Journal of Quaternary Science |date=November 2015 |volume=30 |issue=8 |pages=731–735 |doi=10.1002/jqs.2819|s2cid=130591343 }}</ref> in others, aragonite forms only discrete parts of a bimineralic shell (aragonite plus calcite).<ref name=BelcherEtAl/> The nacreous layer of the aragonite ] shells of some extinct ]s forms an ] material called ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Mychaluk |first1=Keith A. |last2=Levinson |first2=Alfred A. |last3=Hall |first3=Russel L. |title=Ammolite: Iridescent fossilized ammonite from southern Alberta, Canada |journal=Gems & Gemology |date=Spring 2001 |volume=37 |issue=1 |pages=4–25 |doi=10.5741/GEMS.37.1.4 |url=https://www.gia.edu/doc/Iridescent-Fossilized-Ammonite-from-Southern-Alberta-Canada.pdf |access-date=1 August 2021}}</ref> | Aragonite forms naturally in almost all ] shells, and as the ] of warm- and cold-water ]s (]). Several ] have aragonitic tubes.<ref name=Boggs>{{cite book |last1=Boggs |first1=Sam |title=Principles of sedimentology and stratigraphy |date=2006 |publisher=Pearson Prentice Hall |location=Upper Saddle River, N.J. |isbn=0131547283 |edition=4th |pages=161–164}}</ref> Because the mineral deposition in mollusk shells is strongly biologically controlled,<ref name=BelcherEtAl>{{cite journal |last1=Belcher |first1=A. M. |last2=Wu |first2=X. H. |last3=Christensen |first3=R. J. |last4=Hansma |first4=P. K. |last5=Stucky |first5=G. D. |last6=Morse |first6=D. E. |title=Control of crystal phase switching and orientation by soluble mollusc-shell proteins |journal=Nature |date=May 1996 |volume=381 |issue=6577 |pages=56–58 |doi=10.1038/381056a0|bibcode=1996Natur.381...56B |s2cid=4285912 }}</ref> some crystal forms are distinctively different from those of inorganic aragonite.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Chateigner |first1=D. |last2=Ouhenia |first2=S. |last3=Krauss |first3=C. |last4=Belkhir |first4=M. |last5=Morales |first5=M. |title=Structural distortion of biogenic aragonite in strongly textured mollusc shell layers |journal=Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms |date=February 2010 |volume=268 |issue=3–4 |pages=341–345 |doi=10.1016/j.nimb.2009.07.007|bibcode=2010NIMPB.268..341C }}</ref> In some mollusks, the entire shell is aragonite;<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Loftus |first1=Emma |last2=Rogers |first2=Keith |last3=Lee-Thorp |first3=Julia |title=A simple method to establish calcite:aragonite ratios in archaeological mollusc shells: CALCITE:ARAGONITE IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SHELLS |journal=Journal of Quaternary Science |date=November 2015 |volume=30 |issue=8 |pages=731–735 |doi=10.1002/jqs.2819|s2cid=130591343 }}</ref> in others, aragonite forms only discrete parts of a bimineralic shell (aragonite plus calcite).<ref name=BelcherEtAl/> The nacreous layer of the aragonite ] shells of some extinct ]s forms an ] material called ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Mychaluk |first1=Keith A. |last2=Levinson |first2=Alfred A. |last3=Hall |first3=Russel L. |title=Ammolite: Iridescent fossilized ammonite from southern Alberta, Canada |journal=Gems & Gemology |date=Spring 2001 |volume=37 |issue=1 |pages=4–25 |doi=10.5741/GEMS.37.1.4 |url=https://www.gia.edu/doc/Iridescent-Fossilized-Ammonite-from-Southern-Alberta-Canada.pdf |access-date=1 August 2021}}</ref> | ||
Aragonite also forms naturally in the endocarp of '']''.<ref>{{Cite journal|author1=Wang, Jang|author2=Jahren, A. Hope|author3=Amundsen, Ronald|year=1996|title=Potential For Dating Of Biogenic Carbon In Hackberry (Celtis) Endocarps|url=http://eoas.fsu.edu/sites/default/files/u12/Faculty-Misc/Wang/pubs/potential-Cdating-biogenic-carbonate-hackberry-endocarps.pdf|journal=Quaternary Research|volume=47|pages=337–343|doi=10.1006/qres.1997.1894|s2cid=49232599 }}{{Dead link|date=November 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> | Aragonite also forms naturally in the endocarp of '']''.<ref>{{Cite journal|author1=Wang, Jang|author2=Jahren, A. Hope|author3=Amundsen, Ronald|year=1996|title=Potential For Dating Of Biogenic Carbon In Hackberry (Celtis) Endocarps|url=http://eoas.fsu.edu/sites/default/files/u12/Faculty-Misc/Wang/pubs/potential-Cdating-biogenic-carbonate-hackberry-endocarps.pdf|journal=Quaternary Research|volume=47|pages=337–343|doi=10.1006/qres.1997.1894|s2cid=49232599 }}{{Dead link|date=November 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> |
Revision as of 02:37, 18 February 2023
Calcium carbonate mineralAragonite is a carbonate mineral, one of the three most common naturally occurring crystal forms of calcium carbonate, CaCO3 (the other forms being the minerals calcite and vaterite). It is formed by biological and physical processes, including precipitation from marine and freshwater environments.
The crystal lattice of aragonite differs from that of calcite, resulting in a different crystal shape, an orthorhombic crystal system with acicular crystal. Repeated twinning results in pseudo-hexagonal forms. Aragonite may be columnar or fibrous, occasionally in branching helictitic forms called flos-ferri ("flowers of iron") from their association with the ores at the Carinthian iron mines.
Occurrence
The type location for aragonite is Molina de Aragón in the Province of Guadalajara in Castilla-La Mancha, Spain, for which it was named in 1797. Aragonite is found in this locality as cyclic twins inside gypsum and marls of the Keuper facies of the Triassic. This type of aragonite deposit is very common in Spain, and there are also some in France.
An aragonite cave, the Ochtinská Aragonite Cave, is situated in Slovakia.
In the US, aragonite in the form of stalactites and "cave flowers" (anthodite) is known from Carlsbad Caverns and other caves. For a few years in the early 1900s, aragonite was mined at Aragonite, Utah (now a ghost town).
Massive deposits of oolitic aragonite sand are found on the seabed in the Bahamas.
Aragonite is the high pressure polymorph of calcium carbonate. As such, it occurs in high pressure metamorphic rocks such as those formed at subduction zones.
Aragonite forms naturally in almost all mollusk shells, and as the calcareous endoskeleton of warm- and cold-water corals (Scleractinia). Several serpulids have aragonitic tubes. Because the mineral deposition in mollusk shells is strongly biologically controlled, some crystal forms are distinctively different from those of inorganic aragonite. In some mollusks, the entire shell is aragonite; in others, aragonite forms only discrete parts of a bimineralic shell (aragonite plus calcite). The nacreous layer of the aragonite fossil shells of some extinct ammonites forms an iridescent material called ammolite.
Aragonite also forms naturally in the endocarp of Celtis occidentalis.
Aragonite also forms in the ocean inorganic precipitates called marine cements (in the sediment) or as free crystals (in the water column). Inorganic precipitation of aragonite in caves can occur in the form of speleothems. Aragonite is common in serpentinites where magnesium-rich pore solutions apparently inhibit calcite growth and promote aragonite precipitation.
Aragonite is metastable at the low pressures near the Earth's surface and is thus commonly replaced by calcite in fossils. Aragonite older than the Carboniferous is essentially unknown. It can also be synthesized by adding a calcium chloride solution to a sodium carbonate solution at temperatures above 60 °C (140 °F) or in water-ethanol mixtures at ambient temperatures.
Physical properties
Aragonite is not the thermodynamically stable phase of calcium carbonate at any pressure below about 3,000 bars (300,000 kPa) at any temperature. Aragonite nonetheless frequently forms in near-surface environments at ambient temperatures. The difference in stability between aragonite and calcite, as measured by the Gibbs free energy of formation, is small, and effects of grain size and impurities can be important. The formation of aragonite at temperatures and pressures where calcite should be the stable polymorph may be an example of Ostwald's step rule, where a less stable phase is the first to form. The presence of magnesium ions may inhibit calcite formation in favor of aragonite. Once formed, aragonite tends to alter to calcite on scales of 10 to 10 years.
The mineral vaterite, also known as μ-CaCO3, is another phase of calcium carbonate that is metastable at ambient conditions typical of Earth's surface, and decomposes even more readily than aragonite.
Uses
In aquaria, aragonite is considered essential for the replication of reef conditions. Aragonite provides the materials necessary for much sea life and also keeps the pH of the water close to its natural level, to prevent the dissolution of biogenic calcium carbonate.
Aragonite has been successfully tested for the removal of pollutants like zinc, cobalt and lead from contaminated wastewaters.
Claims that magnetic water treatment can reduce scaling, by converting calcite to aragonite, have been met with skepticism, but continue to be investigated.
Gallery
- Aragonite crystal from Los Molinillos, Ceunca, Spain
- Aragonite crystals from Cuenca, Castile-La Mancha, Spain
- Aragonite crystal cluster from Spain
- Remnant biogenic aragonite (thin, rainbow-colored shell) on the ammonite Baculites (Pierre Shale, Late Cretaceous, South Dakota)
- Scanning electron microscope image of aragonite layers in the nacre of a blue mussel (Mytilus edulis)
- Fluorescence of aragonite
See also
- Aragonite sea
- Ikaite, CaCO3·6H2O
- List of minerals
- Monohydrocalcite, CaCO3·H2O
- Nacre, otherwise known as "Mother-of-Pearl"
References
- Bragg, William Lawrence (1924-01). "The structure of aragonite". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character. 105 (729): 16–39. doi:10.1098/rspa.1924.0002. ISSN 0950-1207.
{{cite journal}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ Sinkankas, John (1964). Mineralogy for amateurs. Princeton, N.J.: Van Nostrand. pp. 371–372. ISBN 0442276249.
- Cairncross, B.; McCarthy, T. (2015). Understanding Minerals & Crystals. Cape Town: Struik Nature. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-43170-084-4.
- Calvo, Miguel (2012). Minerales y Minas de España. Vol. V. Carbonatos y Nitratos. Madrid: Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros de Minas de Madrid. Fundación Gómez Pardo. pp. 314–398. ISBN 978-84-95063-98-4.
- Pukanská, Katarína; Bartoš, Karol; Bella, Pavel; Gašinec, Juraj; Blistan, Peter; Kovanič, Ľudovít (4 July 2020). "Surveying and High-Resolution Topography of the Ochtiná Aragonite Cave Based on TLS and Digital Photogrammetry". Applied Sciences. 10 (13): 4633. doi:10.3390/app10134633.
- Gonzalez, Luis A.; Lohmann, Kyger C. (1988). "Controls on Mineralogy and Composition of Spelean Carbonates: Carlsbad Caverns, New Mexico". In James, Noel P.; Choquette, Philip W. (eds.). Paleokarst. New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. 81–101. doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-3748-8. ISBN 978-1-4612-3748-8.
- Balaz, Christine (2009). An Explorer's Guide: Utah. Vermont: The Countryman Press. p. 368. ISBN 978-0-88150-738-6.
- Newell, Norman D.; Purdy, Edward G.; Imbrie, John (1960). "Bahamian Oölitic Sand". The Journal of Geology. 68 (5): 481–497. Bibcode:1960JG.....68..481N. doi:10.1086/626683. ISSN 0022-1376. S2CID 129571671.
- Nesse, William D. (2000). Introduction to mineralogy. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 336–337. ISBN 9780195106916.
- Boggs, Sam (2006). Principles of sedimentology and stratigraphy (4th ed.). Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall. pp. 161–164. ISBN 0131547283.
- ^ Belcher, A. M.; Wu, X. H.; Christensen, R. J.; Hansma, P. K.; Stucky, G. D.; Morse, D. E. (May 1996). "Control of crystal phase switching and orientation by soluble mollusc-shell proteins". Nature. 381 (6577): 56–58. Bibcode:1996Natur.381...56B. doi:10.1038/381056a0. S2CID 4285912.
- Chateigner, D.; Ouhenia, S.; Krauss, C.; Belkhir, M.; Morales, M. (February 2010). "Structural distortion of biogenic aragonite in strongly textured mollusc shell layers". Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms. 268 (3–4): 341–345. Bibcode:2010NIMPB.268..341C. doi:10.1016/j.nimb.2009.07.007.
- Loftus, Emma; Rogers, Keith; Lee-Thorp, Julia (November 2015). "A simple method to establish calcite:aragonite ratios in archaeological mollusc shells: CALCITE:ARAGONITE IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SHELLS". Journal of Quaternary Science. 30 (8): 731–735. doi:10.1002/jqs.2819. S2CID 130591343.
- Mychaluk, Keith A.; Levinson, Alfred A.; Hall, Russel L. (Spring 2001). "Ammolite: Iridescent fossilized ammonite from southern Alberta, Canada" (PDF). Gems & Gemology. 37 (1): 4–25. doi:10.5741/GEMS.37.1.4. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
- Wang, Jang; Jahren, A. Hope; Amundsen, Ronald (1996). "Potential For [Carbon 14] Dating Of Biogenic Carbon In Hackberry (Celtis) Endocarps" (PDF). Quaternary Research. 47: 337–343. doi:10.1006/qres.1997.1894. S2CID 49232599.
- Bialik, Or M.; Sisma-Ventura, Guy; Vogt-Vincent, Noam; Silverman, Jacob; Katz, Timor (24 September 2022). "Role of oceanic abiotic carbonate precipitation in future atmospheric CO2 regulation". Scientific Reports. 12 (1): 15970. doi:10.1038/s41598-022-20446-7. PMC 9509385. PMID 36153366.
- Tucker, Maurice E. (1990). Carbonate sedimentology. Oxford : Blackwell Scientific Publications. ISBN 9781444314175.
- Nesse 2000, p. 337.
- Bonatti, E.; Lawrence, J.R.; Hamlyn, P.R.; Breger, D. (August 1980). "Aragonite from deep sea ultramafic rocks". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 44 (8): 1207–1214. Bibcode:1980GeCoA..44.1207B. doi:10.1016/0016-7037(80)90074-5.
- Runnegar, B. (1987). "Shell microstructures of Cambrian molluscs replicated by phosphate". Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. 9 (4): 245–257. doi:10.1080/03115518508618971.
- Sand, K.K., Rodriguez-Blanco, J.D., Makovicky, E., Benning, L.G. and Stipp, S. (2012) Crystallization of CaCO3 in water-ethanol mixtures: spherulitic growth, polymorph stabilization and morphology change. Crystal Growth & Design, 12, 842-853. doi:10.1021/cg2012342.
- Carlson, W.D. (1980). "The calcite–aragonite equilibrium: effects of Sr substitution and anion orientational disorder". American Mineralogist. 65 (11–12): 1252–1262. Retrieved 31 July 2021.
- Fyfe, W.S. (1964). "Calcite aragonite problem" (PDF). AAPG Bulletin. 48 (4): 526. Retrieved 31 July 2021.
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