Tatiana Chvileva

Tatiana Chvileva
BornJanuary 7, 1925 Edit this on Wikidata

Tatiana Nikiforovna Chvileva[1] (Russian: Чвилёва Татья́на Ники́форовна; 7 January 1925 – March 2000) was a Soviet and Russian mineralogist, petrographer and petrologist, candidate of geological and mineralogical sciences (1962), developer of new methods for diagnosing minerals, active participant and author of the discovery of a number of new minerals. For more than 30 years, she has been a leading employee of the Moscow Institute of Mineralogy, Geochemistry and Crystal Chemistry of Rare Elements, developer of new methods for diagnosing minerals, mineralogist at the mineragraphy office.[2]: 115 

During the 1970s — 1980s, Tatyana Chvileva co-authored the discovery of several new minerals, primarily bilibinskite, velikite, bezsmertnovite, gruzdevite and thallium-containing hakite.[3] In 1988, a new polymetallic mineral, chvilevaite (Russian: чвилеваит, чвилёваит),[4] found in Transbaikalia, was named in honor of Tatyana Chvileva; its composition is ferro-sulfide of sodium, zinc and copper with the formula Na(Cu,Fe,Zn)2S2.[5] By decision of the International Mineralogical Association, Tatyana Chvileva was included in the encyclopedia of famous geologists and mineralogists of the world.[2]: 116 

External image
image icon photograph of Tatyana Chvileva

Tatyana Chvileva is the author of five monographs and more than eight dozen scientific articles. She made a significant contribution to the complex problem of diagnosing ore minerals and brought domestic science to a new level. Since the late 1980s, her definitive monographs have served as a textbook for students of Russian universities.[2]: 116 

  1. ^ In most cases, her name is written in Latin as «Tatyana Chvileva». However, this does not accurately convey the sound of the surname: Chvilyova or Čvilyova.
  2. ^ a b c Official website of the Institute of Mineralogy, Geochemistry and Crystal Chemistry of Rare Elements, IMGRE.ru. Institute employees, labor veterans.
  3. ^ Minerals named after employees of the Institute of Mineralogy, Geochemistry and Crystal Chemistry of Rare Elements: IMGRE, 2023.
  4. ^ Chvilevaite (A valid IMA mineral species): information about the mineral chvilevait in the Mindat database.
  5. ^ Chvilevaite: Handbook of Mineralogy