Dictionary Definition
uraninite n : a mineral consisting of uranium
oxide and trace amounts of radium and thorium and polonium and lead
and helium; uraninite in massive form is called pitchblende which
is the chief uranium ore [syn: pitchblende]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Any of several brownish-black forms of uranium dioxide, UO2, (especially pitchblende) that is the chief ore of uranium; it is isomorphous with thorianite.
Noun
Extensive Definition
Uraninite is a uranium-rich mineral with a composition that
is largely UO2 (uranium
dioxide), but which also contains UO3 and
oxides of lead, thorium, and rare
earths. It is most commonly known in the variety pitchblende
(from pitch, because of its black color, and blende, a term used by
German
miners to denote minerals whose density suggested metal content,
but whose exploitation was, at the time they were named, either
impossible or not economically feasible). All uraninite minerals
contain a small amount of radium as a radioactive
decay product of uranium; it was in pitchblende from the
Jáchymov
(then Joachimsthal, Austria-Hungary)
now in the Czech
Republic that Marie
Curie discovered radium. Uraninite also always contains small
amounts of the lead
isotopes, Pb-206 and
Pb-207, the end products of the decay series of the uranium
isotopes U-238 and U-235 respectively. Small amounts of helium are also present in
uraninite as a result of alpha decay.
Helium was first found on Earth in uraninite after previously being
discovered spectroscopically in the
Sun's
atmosphere. The extremely rare element technetium can be found in
uraninite in very small quantities (about 0.2 ng/kg), produced by
the spontaneous fission
of uranium-238.
Uraninite is a major ore of uranium. An important
occurrence of pitchblende is at Great Bear
Lake in the Northwest
Territories of Canada, where it is
found in large quantities associated with silver. Some of the highest grade
uranium ores in the world have been found in the Athabasca
Basin in northern Saskatchewan.
It also occurs in Australia,
Germany,
England,
and South
Africa. In the United
States it can be found in the states of New
Hampshire, Connecticut,
North
Carolina, Wyoming, Colorado and
New
Mexico.
References
- Dana's Manual of Mineralogy ISBN 0-471-03288-3
uraninite in German: Uraninit
uraninite in Spanish: Pechblenda
uraninite in French: Pechblende
uraninite in Indonesian: Pitchblende
uraninite in Italian: Uraninite
uraninite in Japanese: 閃ウラン鉱
uraninite in Latvian: Uraninīts
uraninite in Lithuanian: Uraninitas
uraninite in Hungarian: Uránszurokérc
uraninite in Dutch: Uraniniet
uraninite in Norwegian Nynorsk: Bekblende
uraninite in Polish: Uraninit
uraninite in Portuguese: Pechblenda
uraninite in Russian: Настуран
uraninite in Finnish:
Uraniitti