| 1. | Tin has ten stable isotopes, the largest number known for an element.
|
| 2. | It is notable as the heaviest known stable isotope of any element.
|
| 3. | Stable isotope analysis of strontium and oxygen can also be carried out.
|
| 4. | For 80 of the chemical elements, at least one stable isotope exists.
|
| 5. | Its only stable isotope, 89 Y, is also its only naturally occurring isotope.
|
| 6. | However more recently, separated stable isotopes have also come into use.
|
| 7. | Neither the most stable isotope astatine-210 nor the medically useful astatine-211 occurs naturally.
|
| 8. | Stable isotope tracers involve only non-radiogenic isotopes and usually are mass-dependent.
|
| 9. | The stable isotope 113 In is only 4.3 % of naturally occurring indium.
|
| 10. | Concurrently, advances in atomic physics stimulated investigations in stable isotope geochemistry.
|