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Mineralogical Magazine; December 2006; v. 70; no. 6; p. 745-746
© 2006 Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland
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Book Review

Hawthorne, F.C. Landmark Papers: Structure Topology.

Mineralogical Society of Great Britain & Ireland, 2006, iii + 301 pp. Price £32.00, US $60 (£18.00 to members of the Mineralogical Society). ISBN-13: 978-0-903056-23-6, ISBN-10: 0-903056-23-2

G. Diego Gatta

The first 20% of the full text of this article appears below.

In this second volume of the Mineralogical Society’s ‘Landmark’ series, Prof. Frank Hawthorne has selected a number of key papers, some of which are true milestones of mineralogy and crystallography, showing the acceleration of research and the increase in knowledge in the field of crystal-chemistry. The papers follow in chronological sequence, allowing the reader to see how crystallography and, particularly, mineralogy have evolved during the last 80 years. He has chosen the papers on the basis of three related aspects: (a) the nature of chemical bonds, and (b) their relation to bond topology, leading to (c) the prediction of bond topologies and their hierarchical organization. His commentaries on the selected papers provided a coherent narrative thread running through the volume.

In the first chapter ‘Bond topology and Minerals’, Hawthorne reviews the long history of the mineralogy and crystallography, reporting the evolution of the knowledge and the experimental findings in the last 2,000 years. The author introduces the mathematical concept of topology and . . . [Full Text of this Article]







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