[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"minerals:one:3135":3},{"id":4,"longid":5,"guid":6,"name":7,"shortcode_ima":8,"entrytype":9,"entrytype_text":10,"varietyof":11,"synid":11,"polytypeof":11,"groupid":11,"weighting":12,"nolocadd":13,"blacklisted":13,"mindat_formula":14,"mindat_formula_note":11,"ima_formula":15,"elements":16,"sigelements":20,"key_elements":21,"impurities":11,"cim":22,"ima_status":23,"ima_notes":11,"ima_history":11,"approval_year":11,"publication_year":25,"discovery_year":26,"strunz10ed1":27,"strunz10ed2":28,"strunz10ed3":29,"strunz10ed4":30,"dana8ed1":31,"dana8ed2":32,"dana8ed3":33,"dana8ed4":32,"csystem":34,"cclass":35,"spacegroup":36,"spacegroupset":37,"a":38,"b":39,"c":40,"alpha":41,"beta":42,"gamma":41,"aerror":11,"berror":11,"cerror":11,"alphaerror":11,"betaerror":11,"gammaerror":11,"va3":11,"z":43,"csmetamict":13,"commentcrystal":11,"twinning":11,"tranglide":11,"parting":11,"epitaxidescription":11,"morphology":44,"tlform":45,"hmin":46,"hmax":46,"hardtype":11,"vhnmin":41,"vhnmax":41,"vhnerror":11,"vhng":11,"vhns":11,"commenthard":11,"dmeas":47,"dmeas2":47,"dcalc":48,"dmeaserror":35,"dcalcerror":11,"commentdense":11,"lustre":11,"lustretype":49,"commentluster":11,"diapheny":50,"streak":51,"colour":52,"commentcolor":11,"colors":53,"streak_colors":57,"luminescence":11,"uv":58,"cleavage":59,"cleavagetype":60,"fracturetype":11,"tenacity":61,"commentbreak":11,"opticaltype":62,"opticalsign":63,"opticalalpha":41,"opticalalpha2":41,"opticalalphaerror":11,"opticalbeta":64,"opticalbeta2":65,"opticalbetaerror":11,"opticalgamma":41,"opticalgamma2":41,"opticalgammaerror":11,"opticalomega":41,"opticalomega2":41,"opticalomegaerror":11,"opticalepsilon":41,"opticalepsilon2":41,"opticalepsilonerror":11,"opticaln":64,"opticaln2":65,"opticalnerror":11,"optical2vcalc":41,"optical2vcalc2":41,"optical2vcalcerror":11,"optical2vmeasured":66,"optical2vmeasured2":41,"optical2vmeasurederror":11,"rimin":67,"rimax":68,"opticaldispersion":69,"opticalpleochroism":70,"opticalpleochorismdesc":11,"opticalbirefringence":71,"opticalcomments":11,"opticalcolour":11,"opticalinternal":11,"opticaltropic":11,"opticalanisotropism":11,"opticalbireflectance":11,"opticalextinction":72,"opticalr":11,"specdispm":11,"ir":11,"electrical":11,"magnetism":11,"thermalbehaviour":11,"other":73,"industrial":11,"occurrence":74,"otheroccurrence":11,"type_specimen_store":75,"description_short":11,"aboutname":76,"rock_parent":11,"rock_parent2":11,"rock_root":9,"rock_bgs_code":11,"meteoritical_code":11,"updttime":77,"reviewed_at":11,"variety_of":11,"varieties":78,"group_members":79,"associates":80,"confused_with":81,"type_localities":82,"occurrence_total":68,"citations":89,"images":111,"structures":122,"synonyms":129,"language_names":132,"wikidata_qid":148,"texts":149},3135,"1:1:3135:2","69ba8cd6-6645-40a8-b6a1-88b4829f0abb","Paulmooreite","Pmo",0,"mineral",null,23,false,"Pb\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>[As\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>O\u003Csub>5\u003C\u002Fsub>]","Pb\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>As\u003Csup>3+\u003C\u002Fsup>\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>O\u003Csub>5\u003C\u002Fsub>",[17,18,19],"As","Pb","O",[17,18,19],[17,18],"23.6",[24],"APPROVED",1979,"1979","4","J","A","50","45","1","8","Monoclinic",5,14,"P21\u002Fa","13.548","5.650","8.551","0","108.78",4,"Tabular on {100} or {001}; Observed faces include {100}, {001}, {011} with small or uncommon {\u003Cmi>2\u003C\u002Fmi>01}, {110}, {111}.","Tabular crystals and grains to 0.5-1.0 mm ",3,"6.95","6.86","Sub-Adamantine","Transparent","White","Colourless to pale orange",[54,55,56],"colorless","orange","white",[56],"Not fluorescent in UV,","{100}","Distinct\u002FGood","very brittle","Biaxial","+","1.9","2.0","65",1.9,2,"r > v very strong","Non-pleochroic","0.1","Z^a = 10°, Y=b","Readily soluble in 1:1 HNO, and whitens within minutes in 1:1 HCl to opaque white.","Metamorphosed iron-manganese stratabound deposit containing unusual enrichment of many trace elements.","Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden, number 252356.\r\nHarvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, number 134563.\r\nNational Museum of Natural History, Washington, D.C., USA, numbers 134973, 142974.","Named in 1979 by Pete J. Dunn, Donald R. Peacor, and B. Darko Sturman in honor of Dr. Paul (Paulus) B. Moore [November 24, 1940 Stamford Connecticut, USA - 2 March 2019 Texas, USA], former Professor of Physics, University of Chicago. At the University, Paul worked closely with his colleague, Takaharu Araki. He developed an interest in minerals from his teacher in public school in Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, Wilfred R. Welsh [January 29, 1915 West Orange, New Jersey, USA - November 14, 2002 Newton, New Jersey, USA]. Paul's first love was minerals of Franklin-Ogdensburg, New Jersey, but he also specialized in the study of phosphates from granite pegmatites, mineralogy of Långban, Sweden and in the physics, mineralogy, and structure of lithium-bearing and boron-bearing minerals. He was a prolific student of crystal structures analysis and proposed a number of crystallo-chemical relationship in minerals. He was a also student of the Franklin Marble formation, NJ and NY. Paul was noted for his field studies as well as his laboratory work. In 1973, Paul was the recipient of the Mineralogical Society of America Award. Paul named a great many phosphate and arsenate minerals, as well as minerals from other groups. A partial species list of minerals he named includes: bjarebyite, ericssonite, eveite, ferrowyllieite, foggite, gabrielsonite, gainesite, goedkinite, jahnsite-(CaMnFe), jahnsite-(CaMnMg), julgoldite-Fe2+, julgoldite-Fe3+, joesmithite, jungite, kidwellite, maghagendorfite, manganhumite, matulaite, olmsteadite, orthoericssonite, parwelite, perloffite, philolithite, robertsite, rosemaryite, samuelsonite, schoonerite, segelerite, stenhuggarite, welinite, welshite, wermlandite, whiteite-(CaFeMg), whiteite-(MnFeMg), whitmoreite, and wyllieite. He was the author of hundreds of publications, more than a hundred of which were crystal structure determinations, and was co-author of the book: Phosphate Minerals.\r\nAs a recreational pursuit, he had a fascination for butterflies, discovering gender-specific fluorescent properties of wing pigments. (In his retirement years, Paul legally changed his named to its Latinized version, \u003Cem>Paulus,\u003C\u002Fem> in homage to the time-honored practice of many early scientists. Few, if any, of his voluminous publications use \"Paulus\" on the by-line.)","2025-08-11 12:14:22",[],[],[],[],[83],{"id":84,"txt":85,"latitude":86,"longitude":87,"country":88},3167,"Långban Mine, Långban Ore District, Filipstad, Värmland County, Sweden",59.8553767,14.2648029,"Sweden",[90,93,97,102,106],{"id":91,"year":25,"html":92,"doi":11},527210,"Dunn, Pete J., Peacor, Donald R., Sturman, B. Darko (1979) Paulmooreite, a new lead arsenite mineral from Långban, Sweden. \u003Ci>American Mineralogist\u003C\u002Fi>,  64 (3-4) 352-354 \u003Ca target='_blank' href='http:\u002F\u002Fwww.minsocam.org\u002Fammin\u002FAM64\u002FAM64_352.pdf' class='refpdflink'>\u003C\u002Fa>",{"id":94,"year":95,"html":96,"doi":11},527404,1980,"Araki, Takaharu, Moore, Paul B., Brunton, George D. (1980) The crystal structure of paulmooreite, Pb\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>[As\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>O\u003Csub>5\u003C\u002Fsub>]: dimeric arsenite groups. \u003Ci>American Mineralogist\u003C\u002Fi>,  65 (3-4) 340-345 \u003Ca target='_blank' href='http:\u002F\u002Fwww.minsocam.org\u002Fammin\u002FAM65\u002FAM65_340.pdf' class='refpdflink'>\u003C\u002Fa>",{"id":98,"year":99,"html":100,"doi":101},29038,1988,"Mitchell, Richard S. (1988) Who's Who: In Mineral Names, Paul Brian Moore (1940-), Jun Ito (1926–1978) \u003Ci>Rocks & Minerals\u003C\u002Fi>,  63 (3) 228-231 \u003Ca target='_blank' href='https:\u002F\u002Fdoi.org\u002F10.1080\u002F00357529.1988.11761840'>doi:10.1080\u002F00357529.1988.11761840\u003C\u002Fa>","10.1080\u002F00357529.1988.11761840",{"id":103,"year":104,"html":105,"doi":11},16966601,2005,"(2005) Paulmooreite. \u003Ci>Handbook of Mineralogy\u003C\u002Fi>. Mineralogical Society of America \u003Ca target='_blank' href='https:\u002F\u002Fwww.handbookofmineralogy.org\u002Fpdfs\u002Fpaulmooreite.pdf' class='refpdflink'>\u003C\u002Fa>",{"id":107,"year":108,"html":109,"doi":110},396825,2012,"Bahfenne, S., Rintoul, L., Langhof, J., Frost, R. L. (2012) Single-crystal Raman spectroscopy of natural paulmooreite Pb\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>As\u003Csub>2\u003C\u002Fsub>O\u003Csub>5\u003C\u002Fsub> in comparison with the synthesized analog. \u003Ci>American Mineralogist\u003C\u002Fi>,  97 (1) 143-149 \u003Ca target='_blank' href='https:\u002F\u002Fdoi.org\u002F10.2138\u002Fam.2011.3808'>doi:10.2138\u002Fam.2011.3808\u003C\u002Fa>","10.2138\u002Fam.2011.3808",[112],{"id":113,"source_url":114,"license_code":115,"credit_html":116,"title":117,"description":118,"author":119,"original_width":120,"original_height":121},18914,"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=120178067","CC BY-SA 4.0","David Hospital, via \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fcommons.wikimedia.org\u002F?curid=120178067\" rel=\"noopener\">Wikimedia Commons\u003C\u002Fa>","Paulmooreite.jpg","Small but outstanding specimen of the extremely rare mineral paulmooreite from the TL in Langban (Långban, Filipstad, Värmland County, Sweden), and the only non slag locality worldwide. Ex Vandenbroucke Museum collection from Waregem, Belgium.","David Hospital",583,499,[123],{"id":124,"url":125,"label":126,"formula":127,"spacegroup":128,"year":95},10523,"\u002Fcif\u002F10523.cif","Araki 1980","Pb2 As2 O5","P 1 21\u002Fa 1",[130,131],"IMA1978-004","Paulmooreiet",[133,137,141,145],{"lang":134,"names":135},"ca",[136],"paulmooreïta",{"lang":138,"names":139},"de",[140],"Paulmooreit",{"lang":142,"names":143},"eu",[144],"Paulmooreita",{"lang":146,"names":147},"it",[7],"Q3898215",{"history":11,"applications":11}]