Collections & Research

Collections & Research Staff


Kimberly Tait
Associate Curator

B.Sc. (1st class Honours), Geology, University of Manitoba, 1999
M.Sc., Geology, University of Manitoba, 2002
Ph.D., Geosciences, University of Arizona, 2007

Kimberly Tait is an Associate Curator of Mineralogy and oversees mineralogical, gemmological and meteoritic research at the ROM. She is also a cross-appointed Assistant Professor in the Department of Geology at the University of Toronto.

Before Kim could even spell the word “geologist”, she knew that was what she wanted to be when she grew up.  Picking up rocks and minerals and bringing them home for her own collection, and even asking her father to pull the car over on the side of the road to look at rocks was not uncommon, even at a very young age. When she was 10 years old, her family moved to Hamilton, Ontario and a geologist and micro-mount collector lived down the street. He would take her collecting, showed her his mineral collection, and even gave her a Mineral encyclopedia signed “To the Future Mineralogist”.

Kim started studying geology at the University of Manitoba, and although many of aspects of geology interested her, her 2nd year mineralogy course definitely stuck out as her favorite. It gave her the opportunity to learn about different types of minerals, how to identify them, and the chemical formulas that apply to each of them.

Kim's research has led to publications on new mineral structures and the nomenclature of mineral groups. She has worked on the alluaudite-group minerals, a group of phosphate and arsenate minerals that were poorly characterized.  She is also interested in non-ambient mineralogy, such as high-pressure and low- or high-temperature phases, using both neutron and X-ray diffraction and scattering techniques.  A majority of her research for her Ph.D was performed at the Los Alamos Neutron Scattering Center (LANSCE), which is a major experimental science facility located in Los Alamos, New Mexico. Several of her experiments at LANSCE were on materials that either form or change properties at extreme conditions, such as gas hydrates and some sulfate minerals that are expected to form on the surface of Mars. She also performs experiments at the Argonne National Laboratory, Advanced Photon Source (APS) in Illinois.  Typically, the experiments at the APS are at high-pressure (10-80 GPa) and use a diamond anvil cell to simulate how the crystal-structure (atomic make-up of a mineral) will behave under such conditions. This kind of research will help us better understand the dynamics and structure of the Earth and other planetary interiors.  

Recent Publications
2010

Tait, K.T., H. Yang, R.T. Downs, C. Li, and W.W. Pinch. "The crystal structure of esperite, with a revised chemical formula, PbCa2(ZnSiO4)3, isostructural with beryllonite." American Mineralogist, 95: 699-705.

2009

Tait, K.T. "The hunt for extraterrestrials: what I found in a Saskatchewan farmer's field." ROM Magazine, 42(2): 13.

2008

Tait, K.T. “Romancing the Stones.”  ROM Magazine , 41(2): 24-31.

2007

Bindi, L., Evain, M., Spry, P.G., Tait, K.T., and Menchetti, S. "Structural role of copper in the minerals of the pearceite-polybasite group: the case of the new minerals cupropearceite and cupropolybasite." Mineralogy Magazine, 71(6): 593–602.

2007

Tait, K.T., F. Trouw, Y. Zhao, C. Brown, and R.T. Downs. “Inelastic neutron scattering studies of dTHF +H2 clathrate.”  J. Chem. Phys., 127(11): 921-927.

2007

Zhao, Y., H. Xu, L.L. Daemen, K.A. Lokshin, K.T. Tait, W.L. Mao, J. Luo, R.P. Currier, and D.D. Hickmott. “High-P/low-T neutron scattering of hydrogen inclusion compounds - progress and prospects.” Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 104: 5727-5731.

2005

Tait, K.T., F.C. Hawthorne, J.D. Grice, L. Ottolini, and V.K. Nayak. “Dellaventuraite, NaNa2(MgMn2TiLi)Si8O22O2, a new anhydrous amphibole from the Kajlidongri manganese mine, Jhabua district, Madhya Pradesh, India.” American Mineralogist, 90: 304-309.

2004

Wang, Z., Y. Zhao, K. Tait, X. Liao, D. Schiferl, C.S. Zha, R.T. Downs, J. Qian, Y. Zhu, and T.D. Shen. “Harder than diamond: A new quenchable hexagonal carbon polymorph synthesized by cold-compression of carbon nanotubes.” Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 101(38): 13699-13702.

2004

Wang, Z., K. Tait, Y. Zhao, D. Schiferl, C.S. Zha, H. Uchida, and R.T Downs. “Size-induced reduction of transition pressure and enhancement of bulk modulus of AlN nanocrystals.”  J. Phys. Chem. B, 108(31): 11506-11508.

2004

Bobev, S. and K.T. Tait. “Methanol- inhibitor or promoter of the formation of gas hydrates from deuterated ice?” American Mineralogist, 89: 1208-1214.

2004

Tait, K.T. and F.C. Hawthorne. “Johillerite from Tolbachik, Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia: Crystal-structure refinement and chemical composition.” Canadian Mineralogist, 42(3): 717-722.

2004

Tait, K.T., F.C. Hawthorne, P.C. Černý, and M.A. Galliski. “Bobfergusonite from the Nancy pegmatite, San Luis Range, Argentina.” Canadian Mineralogist, 42(3): 705-716.

2004

Tait, K.T., F.C. Hawthorne, J. Grice, and J. Jamor. “Potassic-carpholite, a new mineral from the Sawtooth Batholith, Boise County, Idaho.”  Canadian Mineralogist, 42(1): 121-124.

Galleries
Teck Suite of Galleries: Earth's Treasures

ROM Images
Gems and Jewellry
Minerals
Meteorites

Other Links
University of Toronto Geology Faculty Page
RRUFF project, University of Arizona
The Los Alamos Neutron Scattering Center (LANSCE)

Contact Information
Royal Ontario Museum
Department of Natural History
100 Queen's Park
Toronto, ON  
M5S 2C6

Tel: 416.586.5820
Fax: 416.586.5814
E-mail: ktait@rom.on.ca

 

 

Sitting on the NPDF instrument at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE)
Sitting on the NPDF instrument at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE). © Kim Tait

  Working on the HPCAT beamline at the Argonne National Laboratory, Advanced Photon Source.
Working on the HPCAT beamline at the Argonne National Laboratory, Advanced Photon Source.© Kim Tait