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Results 21 - 30 of 42 for Sulfate
  • Article - 26 Aug 2019
    Acid mine drainage (AMD) is a significant source of water pollution in areas surrounding current and historic metal and coal mine sites.
  • Article - 24 Oct 2012
    Jordan is one of the Middle East countries located to the northwest of Saudi Arabia, between Israel and Iraq. The total area of the country is 89,342 km2, and it has a population of 6,508,887 as of...
  • Article - 4 Oct 2012
    Turkmenistan, with a total population of 5,054,828 as of July 2012, is located in Central Asia, bordering the Caspian Sea, between Iran and Kazakhstan. The country mostly has a subtropical desert...
  • Article - 1 May 2018
    There is an urgent need to reduce the amount of pollutants that are discharged into the environment and adequately cleanup areas where these pollutants have travelled to.
  • Article - 31 Oct 2013
    Chalcoalumite was named after the essential elements copper (Greek term ‘chalkos’) and aluminum sulfate (Latin term ‘alum’) in the composition.
  • Article - 25 Oct 2013
    Celestine is a strontium sulfate mineral first discovered in 1791 from Kelley Island, Lake Erie. It belongs to the barite group of minerals. It was named after the Latin word for celestial in allusion...
  • Article - 5 Oct 2013
    Butlerite was named after Professor Gurdon Montague Butler (1881–1961), an American mining geologist associated with the University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
  • Article - 1 Oct 2013
    Bukovskyite is an iron arsenate sulfate mineral that was discovered in 1967 near Kutna Hora, Czech Republic. It was named after the Czech chemist, Antonin Bukovsky, a professor of the secondary school...
  • Article - 3 Aug 2013
    Arthurite is a mixture of divalent copper and iron ions in combination with trivalent arsenate, sulfate and phosphate ions. The mineral was first discovered by Sir Arthur Russell in 1954 at Hingston...
  • Article - 31 Jul 2013
    Antlerite is a greenish hydrous copper sulfate mineral that was first discovered in Antler mine, Mojave Co., Arizona in 1889. The mineral was named after its place of discovery.

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