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- The Foyer Collection of Meteorites
- New Evidence of Meteoritic Origin of the Tunguska Cosmic Body Victor
- Download the Scanned
- Giantredsuns.Pdf (8.856Kb)
- Special Issue: Silicon Carbide: from Fundamentals to Applications
- Handbook of Iron Meteorites, Volume 1
- Concerning Diamond and Gold-Bearing Astropipes of Mongolia
- Moissanite Sic
- Synthetic Moissanite: a New Man-Made Jewel
- The Chiemgau Meteorite Impact Signature of the Stöttham Archaeological Site (SE Germany)
- Revision 2 1 Diamond, Moissanite and Other Unusual Minerals In
- Cosmochemistry, Disk Processes, and Meteorites
- Associated Societies
- SYNTHETIC MOISSANITE: a NEW DIAMOND SUBSTITUTE by Kurt Nassau, Shane F
- Volatilization Kinetics of Silicon Carbide in Reducing Gases: an Experimental Study with Applications to the Survival of Presolar Grains in the Solar Nebula
- Moissanite –
- Ca-Al-Silicate Inclusions in Natural Moissanite (Sic)
- An Evolutionary System of Mineralogy, Part I
- The Fate of Subducted Continental Crust: Evidence from Recycled Uhp –Uht Minerals
- Handbook of Iron Meteorites, Volume 2 (Canyon Diablo, Part 1)
- Local Redox Buffering by Carbon at Low Pressures and the Formation of Moissanite - Natural Sic Andrei A
- Toward a New Scientific Discovery of the Unique Gold and Diamond-Bearing Agit Khangay and Khuree Mandal Astropipes of Mongolia
- Bench Jeweler's Guide to Moissanite
- SILICATE METEORITE STRUCTURES and the ORIGIN of the METEORITES by John A
- Stable Isotope Fractionation During Diamond Growth and the Earth's
- Program of Technical Sessions
- Specific Gas Composition of the Adsorbed Form in Impactites of The
- (2009): the Carbon Isotope Composition of Natural Sic (Moissanite) from the Earth´S Mantle
- Demagnetization of Terrestrial and Extraterrestrial Rocks Under Hydrostatic Pressure up to 1.2Gpa Natalia S
- Impact-Generated Dykes and Shocked Carbonates from the Tunnunik and Haughton Impact Structures, Canadian High Arctic
- Carbon Mineralogy and Crystal Chemistry Robert M
- Polymetallic and Carbonaceous Debris in Palaeosol from the Libyan Desert Glass Strewn Field, Sw Egypt: Evidence of a Cometary Impact
- Paleontology of Earth's Mantle
- BULLETIN SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM Bulletin 94