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corundum |
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corundumNative aluminium oxide and the hardest naturally occurring mineral known, apart from diamond (corundum rates 9 on the Mohs scale of hardness); lack of cleavage also increases its durability. Its crystals are barrel-shaped prisms of the trigonal system. Varieties of gem-quality corundum are ruby (red) and sapphire (any colour other than red, usually blue). Poorer-quality and synthetic corundum is used in industry, for example as an abrasive. Corundum forms in silica-poor igneous and metamorphic rocks. It is a constituent of emery, which is metamorphosed bauxite. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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Ash piping, chutes, fan blades, air separators lined with Abresist fused cast basalt, alumina ceramic or Kalcor alumina zirconia corundum. Its densely packed atoms make corundum Earth's second-hardest mineral. Another hypothesis for the polish on the Stone Age corundum ax head is that the Stone Age people never had absolutely pure corundum, which indeed would have required diamond to polish ("In the Buff: Stone Age tools may have derived luster from diamond" SN: 2/19/05, p. |
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