On Biomineralization by  By Heinz A. Lowenstam & Stephen Weiner

On Biomineralization by By Heinz A. Lowenstam & Stephen Weiner

  • R 500.00
    Unit price per 
Tax included.


ISBN1: 9780195049770

Oxford University Press Inc, 27 July 1989

Hardback | 334 pages

A large variety of organisms - from bacteria to man - form minerals. Skeletons, teeth, spicules, spines, shells, darts, and granules are all mineral-containing tissues.

Why, where, and how these minerals form are the central questions addressed in this book. These questions have become important in many fields. Preserved fossils are used to interpret ancient climates, changes in chemical composition of the oceans, or to date geological and archaeological deposits and artefacts. Materials scientists investigate mineralized tissues to try to determine the design principles used by organisms to form strong materials, and many medical problems are associated with
normal and pathological mineralization. Heinz Lowenstam, the pioneering researcher in biomineralization, and his former student Stephen Weiner discuss the basic principles of mineral formation by organisms, and compare the various mineralization processes. Reference tables list all known cases in
which organisms form minerals.