Category
page 2Sulfates
phosphogypsum
thumb|Phosphogypsum stack located near Kėdainiai, [[Lithuania .]]
glycine sulfate
chemical compound
Tutton's salt
family of double salts with monovalent and hexahydrated divalent cations, and a divalent anion
titanium oxide sulphate
chemical compound
radium sulfate
chemical compound
rhodium(III) sulfate
chemical compound
europium(III) sulfate
chemical compound
bismuth sulfate
chemical compound
vanadium sulfate
chemical compound
europium(II) sulfate
chemical compound
neodymium sulfate
chemical compound
yttrium(III) sulfate
chemical compound
gold(II) sulfate
chemical compound
lanthanum sulfate
chemical compound
mammothite
Mammothite is a mineral found in the Mammoth mine in Tiger, Arizona and also in Laurium, Attika, Greece. This mineral was named in 1985 by Donald R. Peacor, Pete J. Dunn, G. Schnorrer-Köhler, and Richard A. Bideaux, for the Mammoth vein (one of the two main veins in the mine) and the town of Mammoth, Arizona, which was named for the mine. The mammothite that is found in Arizona exist as euhedral crystals imbedded in micro granular, white colored anglesite with a saccharoidal texture. The associated minerals include phosgenite, wulfenite, leadhillite and caledonite. In Greece, the mammothite ex
polonium(IV) sulfate
chemical compound
terbium(III) sulfate
chemical compound
plutonium(IV) sulfate
chemical compound