Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 39
pro vyhledávání: '"Daniel E. Kile"'
Autor:
Daniel E. Kile
Publikováno v:
Rocks & Minerals. 94:306-343
All photos by Daniel Kile of specimens collected by and in the collection of Daniel and Dianne Kile unless otherwise notedThe Thunder Bay district in Ontario, Canada, is noted for spectacular ameth...
Autor:
Daniel E. Kile
Publikováno v:
Rocks & Minerals. 90:582-589
FOR MANY YEARS collectors have recovered microcline and albite (variety cleavelandite) specimens from various localities within the Pikes Peak batholith that had unusual irregular hexagonal holes. ...
Publikováno v:
Rocks & Minerals. 90:314-337
Geodes containing celestine with associated quartz, calcite, chlorite, and other minerals occur in the Jurassic Curtis Formation of Emery and Wayne counties off the east and south flanks of the San...
Publikováno v:
Rocks & Minerals. 91:305-307
Autor:
Daniel E. Kile
Publikováno v:
American Mineralogist. 98:1372-1374
Ray Everett Wilcox, born on March 31, 1912, in Janesville, Wisconsin, passed away peacefully in Lakewood, Colorado, at age 99 on March 12, 2012, only a few weeks away from his 100th birthday. He was a distinguished Research Geologist at the U.S. Geol
Autor:
Daniel E. Kile
Publikováno v:
Rocks & Minerals. 88:373-375
Autor:
Daniel E. Kile
Publikováno v:
Rocks & Minerals. 79:218-238
Autor:
Daniel E. Kile
Publikováno v:
Rocks & Minerals. 77:252-268
(2002). Occurrence and Genesis of Thunder Eggs Containing Plume and Moss Agate. Rocks & Minerals: Vol. 77, No. 4, pp. 252-268.
Publikováno v:
American Mineralogist. 87:1235-1241
Geological interpretations of crystal size distributions (CSDs) depend on understanding the crystal growth laws that generated the distributions. Most descriptions of crystal growth, including a population-balance modeling equation that is widely use
Publikováno v:
ResearcherID
Scopus-Elsevier
Scopus-Elsevier
The crystal structure and M-site populations of a series of micas-1 M from miarolitic pegmatites that formed within host granitic rocks of the Precambrian, anorogenic Pikes Peak batholith, central Colorado, were determined by single-crystal X-ray dif