What's the difference between calcite and coccolith?

Calcite


Definition:

  • (n.) Calcium carbonate, or carbonate of lime. It is rhombohedral in its crystallization, and thus distinguished from aragonite. It includes common limestone, chalk, and marble. Called also calc-spar and calcareous spar.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The crystallographic orientation of the calcite also appears to be independent of these fibrils.
  • (2) The calcium carbonates-calcite, aragonite, and vaterite-constitute most of the remainder of the calculi.
  • (3) Crystallographic analysis of stones from patients with nutritional pancreatitis (NP), as well as alcoholic pancreatitis (AP), revealed that the main constituent was calcite (CaCO3).
  • (4) Calcite was present in all stones, vaterite in 12%, and a central amorphous material in 30%.
  • (5) X-ray diffraction showed that calcite (CaCO3) was the major crystalline constituent of the calcareous deposits.
  • (6) When the doped glasses have been immersed in a physiological solution (199 medium), a film of calcite forms on the glass surface and this modification is related to the type of doping agent used, decisive for close linking between metal supports and the glass.
  • (7) We suggest that precipitation of calcite in the pancreatic duct occurs as the primary event in the formation of pancreatic calculi and that it may continue until the duct is completely occluded.
  • (8) 5-7): calcite and quartz are the principal components of the sinters, additional diffuse apatite lines appear in bone samples.
  • (9) These features are characteristic of sea urchin (Echinoderm) spines which are composed of ornately formed calcite crystals covered by an epithelium.
  • (10) Its absence in all analyzed invertebrate tissues (including calcitic, aragonitic, and apatitic mineral phases) indicates that matrix protein-bound gamma-carboxyglutamic acid is not obligatory for the calcification process in the invertebrates.
  • (11) Quantitatively, phosphate is by far the most important inhibitor of calcite precipitation present in saliva, suggesting that inhibition of calcite precipitation by the macromolecules may be of secondary significance.
  • (12) Plates of calcite (CaCO3) were implanted in rabbit tibiae, and their biocompatibility and bonding ability to bone were studied.
  • (13) Subsequent increase in diameter of the rod involves the radial development of irregular columns of calcite which arise from the peripheral nodules.
  • (14) The phenomenon of dissolution and recrystallisation in situ of the calcite can be a trap because it can be a reservoir for micro-organisms.
  • (15) Synechococcus strain GL24 was isolated from Fayetteville Green Lake, New York, where it has a demonstrated role in the formation of calcitic minerals.
  • (16) Pancreatic stones are observed in both humans and cattle, and are approximately 95% CaCO3 (calcite) in both species.
  • (17) Skeletal walls of more than one mineralogy have the magnesium-rich layer (calcite) surrounding the living chamber and the strontium-rich layer (aragonite) on the outside.
  • (18) Here we report on the ability of a soil bacterium to synthesize calcite in a calcium-stressed environment.
  • (19) Formation of inner protein nidus in the form of a cobweb is the first stage, then calcite is deposited on this fibrous network as tiny crystals.
  • (20) The biocompatibility of mammal bone with aragonite and calcite skeletons of aquatic invertebrates (Corals, Molluscs) led us, after animal experimentation, to implant in humans artificial dental roots derived from such invertebrates.

Coccolith


Definition:

  • (n.) One of a kind of minute, calcareous bodies, probably vegetable, often abundant in deep-sea mud.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Three acidic polysaccharides (PS-1, PS-2, and PS-3) were extracted from the coccoliths with EDTA and were separated and purified by differential precipitation with magnesium ions and chromatography on DEAE-cellulose.
  • (2) Bibliographic data concerning the variability of coccosphere and coccoliths during the life-cycle of two extant Coccolithophorid species (Calcidiscus gr.
  • (3) The coccoliths from the species Emilania huxleyi (Lohmann) Kamptner contain a water-soluble acid polysaccharide.
  • (4) The method is illustrated by application to mixtures of the constituent sugars of the capsular polysaccharide from Klebsiella type 57, alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, mucus glycoproteins, and the methylated, acidic polysaccharide from the coccoliths of Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) Kamptner.
  • (5) A large-scale cultivation of the Coccolithophoridae was worked out and a new procedure for isolating coccoliths was developed.
  • (6) This species is useful for the study of mineralization, because it produces calcified scales known as coccoliths in homogeneous cell culture.
  • (7) A polysaccharide associated with coccoliths of the marine alga Emiliania huxleyi (coccoliths are elaborately shaped calcite biominerals) was isolated and its influence on the crystallization of calcium oxalate monohydrate crystals was studied.
  • (8) sibogae) are summarized and completed by new observations on the structure of the proximal shield by fossil coccoliths.
  • (9) C-occolithophoridae, a group of mostly unicellular algae, possess a cell wall containing calcified plates, called coccoliths.
  • (10) These observations also point out the possibility of a diachronous evolution of the two shields of the same coccolith type, underlining the necessity for a better knowledge of the proximal shield structure, usually somewhat neglected.
  • (11) Such intermediate coccoliths have been previously described from the Badenian (middle Miocene) of central Europe.
  • (12) The possible role of the polysaccharide as a heterogeneous matrix in coccolith formation is discussed.
  • (13) leptoporus in the latest Miocene (Messinian) assemblages from three oceanic localities (central Pacific, eastern equatorial Atlantic and southwestern Indian oceans) indicates the co-occurrence of two types of coccoliths: (1) typical C. gr.
  • (14) A polysaccharide with similar properties could be isolated from subfossil coccoliths of E. hyxleyi (about 1000 years old).