-
Bastnäs (Swedish:
Bastnäs or Bastnäsfältet) is an ore
field near Riddarhyttan, Västmanland, Sweden. The
mines in
Bastnäs were
earliest mentioned in 1692...
- gets its name from its type locality, the
Bastnäs Mine, Riddarhyttan, Västmanland, Sweden. Ore from the
Bastnäs Mine led to the
discovery of
several new...
- 30.04% La 2O 3.
Cerite was
first described in 1803 for an
occurrence in
Bastnäs in Västmanland, Sweden. The
lanthanum rich species, cerite-(La) was first...
- the mine at
Bastnäs, and had been
trying for
years to find out the
composition of the
abundant heavy gangue rock (the "Tungsten of
Bastnäs",
which despite...
- it is the
highlight every year to hold the race "V75" at Årjängstravet.
Båstnäs Car
Cemetery has
become a
cultural meeting point for
artists and photographers;...
-
didymium made up
least 95% of the rare
earths in the
original cerite from
Bastnäs, Sweden. In
trivalent form,
didymium tinged the
salts of
ceria pink. During...
- 2022 – via YouTube. Ekchoff, Tor (15 June 2019). Trip to Car Cemetery,
Båstnäs Sweden. Apetor.
Archived from the
original on 16
March 2022. Retrieved...
- 1803,
cerium was the
first of the
lanthanide metals to be discovered, in
Bastnäs,
Sweden by Jöns
Jakob Berzelius and
Wilhelm Hisinger, and independently...
-
Bastnasite is a
cerium lanthanum and
neodymium fluoro-carbonate (CeF)CO3, from
Bastnas, near Riddarhyttan, in Vestmanland, Sweden, and the
Pikes Peak
region in...
-
mineralogist Axel
Fredrik Cronstedt discovered a
heavy mineral from the mine at
Bastnäs,
later named cerite.
Thirty years later, fifteen-year-old
Wilhelm Hisinger...