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Dr. Chris Stanley, a minerologist at London's Natural History Museum, was puzzled when mining Group Rio Tinto brought him an unusual specimen. Discovered in a mine near Jadar, Serbia, the mineral had a known chemical
formula - sodium lithium boron silicate hydroxide.
Using his own expertise and
specialized resources, Dr. Stanley was unable to identify the mineral. Finally,
researching the
formula on the Internet, it turns out that this mineral had already been described in Superman comic
books and movies. The formula is an exact match for Kryptonite, the fictional
mineral. Kryptonite, according to DC Comics, was created when the planet Krypton
blew up.
"I'm afraid it's not green and it doesn't glow either - although it will react to ultraviolet light by fluorescing a pinkish-orange," reported Dr. Stanley, but "the real mineral is white and harmless. The new mineral does not contain fluorine (which it does in the film) and is
white rather than green but, in all other respects, the chemistry matches that
for the rock containing kryptonite. Finding out that the chemical composition of a material was an exact match to an
invented formula for the fictitious kryptonite was the coincidence of a
lifetime," he added.
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 08 May 2007 )
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