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		Definition of gadolinite in English: gadolinitenounˈɡad(ə)lɪnʌɪtɡəˈdəʊlɪnʌɪtˈɡædələˌnaɪt mass nounA rare dark brown or black mineral, consisting of a silicate of iron, beryllium, and rare earths.  Example sentencesExamples -  Like other rare earth metals, it is found in minerals such as cerite, gadolinite, and samarskite.
 -  The most common ores of holmium are monazite and gadolinite.
 -  With sulphuric acid it forms a salt that is as stable on heating as the sulphates from gadolinite or cerite and, like these, can be completely decomposed by heating with ammonium carbonate.
 -  Polycrase, or an allied species, was seen implanted upon the gadolinite, this is also new to the region.
 -  It is found with other rare earth elements in minerals such as monazite, cerite, gadolinite, xenotime, and euxenite.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century: named after Johan Gadolin (1760–1852), the Finnish mineralogist who first identified it.    Definition of gadolinite in US English: gadolinitenounˈɡædələˌnaɪtˈɡadələˌnīt A rare dark brown or black mineral, consisting of a silicate of iron, beryllium, and rare earths.  Example sentencesExamples -  Polycrase, or an allied species, was seen implanted upon the gadolinite, this is also new to the region.
 -  With sulphuric acid it forms a salt that is as stable on heating as the sulphates from gadolinite or cerite and, like these, can be completely decomposed by heating with ammonium carbonate.
 -  Like other rare earth metals, it is found in minerals such as cerite, gadolinite, and samarskite.
 -  The most common ores of holmium are monazite and gadolinite.
 -  It is found with other rare earth elements in minerals such as monazite, cerite, gadolinite, xenotime, and euxenite.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century: named after Johan Gadolin (1760–1852), the Finnish mineralogist who first identified it.     |