Earlier this year, the first naturally occurring quasicrystal was described. Icosahedrite Al63Cu24Fe13 is a new mineral found in southeastern Chukhotka, Russia. It is named “for the icosahedral symmetry of its internal atomic structure, as observed in its diffraction pattern” [3].

- Shechtman, D., Blech, I., Gratias, D. and Cahn, J. (1984) Metallic phase with long-range orientational order and no translational symmetry. Physical Review Letters 53, 1951—1953.
- Fernholm, A. (2011) Crystals of golden proportions. Nobelprize.org.
- Bindi, L., Steinhardt, P.J., Yao, N. and Lu, P.J. (2011) Icosahedrite, Al63Cu24Fe13, the first natural quasicrystal. American Mineralogist 96, 928—931.


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