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Organic mineral
Mellite, also called honeystone, is an unusual mineral being also an organic chemical. It is chemically identified as an aluminium salt of mellitic acid
Mellite
Chemical compound
acid first discovered in 1799 by Martin Heinrich Klaproth in the mineral mellite (honeystone), which is the aluminium salt of the acid. It crystallizes
Mellitic_acid
Magnesite Malachite Marialite-meionite Wernerite (var.) Marcasite Meliphanite Mellite Mesolite Microcline Microlite Milarite Millerite Mimetite Moissanite Musgravite
List_of_gemstones_by_species
Carbon-containing chemical compound
and its anhydride, mellitic anhydride, are associated with the mineral mellite (Al2C6(COO)6·16H2O). A slightly broader definition of the organic compound
Organic_compound
Group of endocrine diseases characterized by high blood sugar levels
or /ˈmɛlɪtəs/) comes from the classical Latin word mellītus, meaning "mellite" (i.e. sweetened with honey; honey-sweet). The Latin word comes from mell-
Diabetes
Natural compound occurring in mineral form
forming crusts on fractures. Early descriptions of organic minerals include mellite in 1793, humboldtine in 1821 and idrialite in 1832. In the proposed 10th
Organic_mineral
Mawsonite Mckelveyite-(Y) Meionite Melanophlogite Melanterite Melilite Mellite Melonite Mendipite Mendozite Meneghinite Mereheadite Merenskyite Meridianiite
List_of_minerals
Chemical compound
acid, which is found in nature as its aluminium salt in the rare mineral mellite. Hexamethylbenzene can be used as a ligand in organometallic compounds
Hexamethylbenzene
hexafluorophosphate Choline chloride Copper ibuprofenate Homatropine methylbromide Mellite Tetrapropylammonium perruthenate Collidinium p-toluenesulfonate Pyridinium
List_of_organic_salts
Chemical compound
obtained by Justus Liebig and Friedrich Wöhler in 1830 in their study of mellite ("honey stone") and has the empirical formula C4O3. The substance was properly
Mellitic_anhydride
Volgograd monumental sculpture
foundation's durability and stability, particularly given the presence of mellite clays on Mamayev Kurgan; the hill could only support the structure if the
The_Motherland_Calls
Crystalline chemical element or compound formed by geologic processes
often biogenic (such as calcite) or chemically organic compounds (such as mellite). Moreover, living organisms often synthesize inorganic minerals (such
Mineral
Hydrocarbon mineral
received a lot of geological uplift after the Jurassic burial. Ozokerite Mellite Warr, L.N. (2021). "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols". Mineralogical
Evenkite
Chemical compounds made of only carbon and oxygen
was apparently obtained by Liebig and Wöhler in 1830 in their study of mellite ("honeystone"), but was characterized only in 1913, by Meyer and Steiner
Oxocarbon
couplets 6 Invective Victius 99 Latin English Surripui tibi, dum ludis, mellite Iuventi elegiac couplets 16 Juventius Regretting a stolen kiss Juventius
List_of_poems_by_Catullus
Middendorfite Mdd Morinite Mori Magnesio-hornblende Mhbl Mapimite Mpm Mellite Mel Middlebackite Mbk Morozeviczite Mzv Magnesiohulsite Mhul Mapiquiroite
List_of_mineral_symbols
locis (13th ed.). Leipzig: Georg Emanuel Beer. Note: first description of mellite. Vauquelin, Louis (1798). "Sur une nouvell terre tirée de l´aigue marine
Timeline of the discovery and classification of minerals
Timeline_of_the_discovery_and_classification_of_minerals
List of IMA recognized minerals and groupings
levinsonite-(Y), 75 zugshunstite-(Ce), 80 novgorodovaite 10.AC Benzene Salts: 05 mellite, 10 earlandite, 15 pigotite? 10.AD Cyanates: 05 julienite*, 10 kafehydrocyanite*
Classification of organic minerals
Classification_of_organic_minerals
Process by which living organisms produce minerals
as calcite) or are organic compounds in the sense of chemistry (such as mellite). Moreover, living beings often synthesize inorganic minerals (such as
Biomineralization
IMA2005-027) 1.BD.20 [576] [577] [no] (IUPAC: tetra(nickel,iron) phosphide) Mellite (Y: 1793) 10.AC.05 [578] [579] [580] (IUPAC: aluminium benzene hexacarboxylate
List of minerals recognized by the International Mineralogical Association (M)
List_of_minerals_recognized_by_the_International_Mineralogical_Association_(M)
Topics referred to by the same term
customized version of Windows Me Mélite, a 1629 play by Pierre Corneille Mellite aka "honey stone", a type of mineral This disambiguation page lists articles
Melite
Species of plant
'First Call', 'Green Sprite', 'Karfunkel', 'Lavender Dawn', 'Melamoena', 'Mellite', 'Misty Plum', 'Mother Mella', 'Proper Lemon' and 'Rolling Tide'. The
Iris_suaveolens
most prevalent endocrine pathology in MELAS syndrome includes diabetes mellites, predominately Type 1, present in 21–33% of patients. This occurs as a
Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy
Mitochondrial_encephalomyopathy
MELLITE
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Boy/Male
German American English
Powerful.
Girl/Female
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Immaculate God
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Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Sanskrit
Rice
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Tamil
Sivasankar | ஸிவாஸஂகர
Goddess Parvati
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Arthurian Legend Scandinavian
Son of Arthur.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Girl/Female
Indian
Girl/Female
British, Christian, English, French, Latin
Joy; Popular Medieval Form of the Name Letitia; Gladness; Happiness
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Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Tamil
God Sivan
Boy/Male
Tamil
Rudraksh | à®°à¯à®¤à¯à®°à®¾à®•à¯à®·Â
Eyes of Lord Shiva, Eyes like Rudra
MELLITE
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n.
A mineral of a honey color, found in brown coal, and partly the result of vegetable decomposition; honeystone. It is a mellitate of alumina.
n.
See Mellite.
a.
Pertaining to, or derived from, the mineral mellite.