Dundasite is a rare lead aluminium carbonate mineral. The mineral is named after the type locality, Dundas, Tasmania, Australia. The mineral was first discovered in the Adelaide Proprietary Mine. Dundasite was first described by William Frederick Petterd in 1893.
via Wikipedia infobox
{{Infobox mineral | name = Dundasite | category = Carbonate mineral | boxwidth = | boxbgcolor = | image = Dundasite and Crocoite.jpg | imagesize = 260px | caption = Dundasite (the white mineral) and crocoite from Dundas, Tasmania. Field of view is 5mm. | formula = PbAl2[(OH)2|CO3]2 • H2O | IMAsymbol = Dun | strunz = 5.DB.10 | system = Orthorhombic | class = Dipyramidal (mmm) H-M symbol: (2/m 2/m 2/m) | symmetry = Pbmm (no. 51) | unit cell = a = 9.08, b = 16.37 c = 5.62 [Å]; Z = 4 | color = White to very pale blue; colorless in transmitted light | habit = Acicular crystals typically in spherical aggregates and matted crusts | twinning = | cleavage = Perfect On {010} | fracture = | mohs = 2 | luster = Vitreous to silky | refractive = nα = 1.603 nβ = 1.716 nγ = 1.750 | opticalprop = Biaxial (-) | birefringence = δ = 0.147 | 2V = Measured: 30° to 40°, calculated: 54° | pleochroism = | streak = White | gravity = 3.10 – 3.55 | melt = | fusibility = | diagnostic = | solubility = | diaphaneity = Transparent | other = | references = }} Dundasite is a rare lead aluminium carbonate mineral. The mineral is named after the type locality, Dundas, Tasmania, Australia. The mineral was first discovered in the Adelaide Proprietary Mine. Dundasite was first described by William Frederick Petterd in 1893.
Dundasite is an uncommon secondary mineral occurring in the oxidized zone of lead ore deposits. It commonly overgrows crocoite. It may also be overgrown by yellow cerussite. It may be associated with cerussite, plattnerite, azurite, malachite, pyromorphite, mimetite, beudantite, duftite, crocoite, gibbsite, allophane and limonite.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).