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The Taxonomy Of Mineral Occurrence Rarity And Endemicity Liubomyr Gavryliv

  • SKU: BELL-47290392
The Taxonomy Of Mineral Occurrence Rarity And Endemicity Liubomyr Gavryliv
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The Taxonomy Of Mineral Occurrence Rarity And Endemicity Liubomyr Gavryliv instant download after payment.

Publisher: Mineralogical Association of Canada
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.35 MB
Pages: 28
Author: Liubomyr Gavryliv, Vitalii Ponomar, Marko Bermanec, Marián Putiš
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

The Taxonomy Of Mineral Occurrence Rarity And Endemicity Liubomyr Gavryliv by Liubomyr Gavryliv, Vitalii Ponomar, Marko Bermanec, Marián Putiš instant download after payment.

Nearly a half of known IMA-approved minerals (as of November 2021) are reported from four localities or fewer and so may be considered rare mineral species. These minerals form a continuum with more common species (e.g., rock-forming minerals), all of which constitute important constituents of Earth and contributors to its dynamics. To better understand the taxonomy of mineral rarity, evaluations have been made on the basis of k-means clustering and kernel density estimation of one-dimensional data on mineral occurrence metrics. Results from second- and third-degree polynomial regression analyses indicate the presence of a divergence between the observed number of endemic minerals discovered since 2000 and those that are likely to represent “true” endemic species. The symmetry index, calculated using the approach of Urusov for each rarity cluster, reveals a gradual decrease from ubiquitous to endemic from 0.64 to 0.47. A network analysis of element co-occurrences within each rarity cluster suggests the existence of at least three different communities having similar geochemical affinities; the latter may reflect the relative abundance of minerals their elements tend to form. The analysis of element co-occurrence matrices within each group indicates that crustal abundance is not the only factor controlling the total number of minerals each element tends to form. Other significant factors include: (1) the geochemical affinity to the principal element in the group (i.e., sulfur for chalcophile and oxygen for lithophile elements) and (2) dispersion of the principal element through geochemical processes. There is a positive correlation between the lithophile element group's abundance in the Earth's crust and the number of common minerals they tend to form, but a negative correlation with the number of rare species.

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