PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Aragonite
rdfs:comment
  • Aragonite is a form of calcium carbonate (CaCO3). Like aragonite, minerals including calcite, chalk, limestone, and marble are also forms of calcium carbonate. The caves found on Xantoras consisted of calcite, aragonite, and botyroidal flowstones. (ENT: "The Breach")
  • Small shelly fossils are sometimes preserved in Aragonite. Image:Mantell's Iguanodon restoration.jpg This article is a . You can help My English Wiki by expanding it.
  • The Aragonite, known in Japanese as Arareseki (aragonite), is the very first Spirit Stone Mio Amakura acquires in Fatal Frame II: Crimson Butterfly. The stone belonged to Miyako Sudo, a woman who wandered into the village in search of her boyfriend, only to be trapped and killed in the Osaka House. The stone can be played through the Spirit Stone Radio Mio also obtains in the same room.
  • __NOEDITSECTION__ <default>Aragonite</default> File:Image needed.jpg Stats Type Weight Value Enchantment Displays Museum Deepholme Technical info Origin RefID XX40FE91(XX must be replaced with the number LEGACY OF THE DRAGONBORN has in your load order)
  • Aragonite forms naturally in almost all mollusk shells, and as the calcareous endoskeleton of warm- and cold-water corals (Scleractinia). Because the mineral deposition in mollusk shells is strongly biologically controlled, some crystal forms are distinctively different from those of inorganic aragonite. In some mollusks, the entire shell is aragonite; in others, aragonite forms only discrete parts of a bimineralic shell (aragonite plus calcite). Aragonite also forms in the ocean and in caves as inorganic precipitates called marine cements and speleothems, respectively. The nacreous layer of the aragonite fossil shells of some extinct ammonites forms an iridescent material called ammolite. Ammolite is primarily aragonite with impurities that make it iridescent and valuable as a gemstone. A
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
Romaji Name
  • Arareseki
RefID
  • 40
Item Type
  • Spirit stone
DMG
  • 100
dbkwik:fossil/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:legacy-of-the-dragonborn/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:memory-alpha/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Realm
  • Crystal Valley
Appearances
  • Fatal Frame II: Crimson Butterfly Fatal Frame II: Deep Crimson Butterfly
GP
  • 21
Type
  • Gemstone
Value
  • 325
dbkwik:gothador/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:fatalframe/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Weight
  • 0.100000
ATT
  • 29
DEF
  • 34
XP
  • 33
Image size
  • 150
Class
  • Crystalline
AC
  • 13
Description
  • "A blue aragonite, left where the woman who wandered into the village was."
Purpose
  • Holds Miyako Sudo's thoughts
Image
  • Aragonite.jpg
HP
  • 329
Japanese name
  • あられ石
Museum
  • Gemstone display in the Gallery of Natural Science.
Variants
  • Aragonite
Location
  • Osaka House: 2F Study
Item Name
  • Aragonite
abstract
  • Aragonite is a form of calcium carbonate (CaCO3). Like aragonite, minerals including calcite, chalk, limestone, and marble are also forms of calcium carbonate. The caves found on Xantoras consisted of calcite, aragonite, and botyroidal flowstones. (ENT: "The Breach")
  • Small shelly fossils are sometimes preserved in Aragonite. Image:Mantell's Iguanodon restoration.jpg This article is a . You can help My English Wiki by expanding it.
  • The Aragonite, known in Japanese as Arareseki (aragonite), is the very first Spirit Stone Mio Amakura acquires in Fatal Frame II: Crimson Butterfly. The stone belonged to Miyako Sudo, a woman who wandered into the village in search of her boyfriend, only to be trapped and killed in the Osaka House. The stone can be played through the Spirit Stone Radio Mio also obtains in the same room.
  • __NOEDITSECTION__ <default>Aragonite</default> File:Image needed.jpg Stats Type Weight Value Enchantment Displays Museum Deepholme Technical info Origin RefID XX40FE91(XX must be replaced with the number LEGACY OF THE DRAGONBORN has in your load order)
  • Aragonite forms naturally in almost all mollusk shells, and as the calcareous endoskeleton of warm- and cold-water corals (Scleractinia). Because the mineral deposition in mollusk shells is strongly biologically controlled, some crystal forms are distinctively different from those of inorganic aragonite. In some mollusks, the entire shell is aragonite; in others, aragonite forms only discrete parts of a bimineralic shell (aragonite plus calcite). Aragonite also forms in the ocean and in caves as inorganic precipitates called marine cements and speleothems, respectively. The nacreous layer of the aragonite fossil shells of some extinct ammonites forms an iridescent material called ammolite. Ammolite is primarily aragonite with impurities that make it iridescent and valuable as a gemstone. Aragonite is metastable and is thus commonly replaced by calcite in fossils. Aragonite older than the Carboniferous is essentially unknown.