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The contents of the Volcanic sublimate page were merged into Fumarole mineral on 30 August 2022 and it now redirects there. For the contribution history and old versions of the merged article please see its history.
*Support merge but still undecided about which direction. This Volcanic sublimate article accurately states that volcanic sublimates are formed during "discharge from a volcanic vent or fumarole". Volcanic sublimates can form without fumaroles. Although they are closely related and, as you mention, have overlapping meanings, volcanic sublimate is not always synonymous with fumarole mineral. Fumarole minerals can be regarded as a subset of volcanic sublimates. I expect that, in the near to medium future, Volcanic sublimate is unlikely to grow beyond its current stub status without a merge from Fumarole mineral. I think a merge is probably an improvement compared to the current situation of two articles. But a merge in which direction? A merge of Fumarole mineral into Volcanic sublimate would be reasonable because of the subset/set relationship. A merge of Volcanic sublimate into Fumarole mineral would be reasonable because fumarole mineral (or its variant fumarolic mineral) is probably the more widely used of the two names and could be justified by WP:COMMONNAME. A Google Scholar search gave me the following number of hits: fumarolic mineral = 136, fumarole mineral = 63, volcanic sublimate = 130. — GeoWriter (talk) 17:56, 24 October 2021 (UTC)Reply
Given the uncertainty as to the direction of the merge, I've merged to the (much) better-developed article, which also seems to be the more common name (accounting for the fumarolic variant discussed by GeoWriter); YMerger complete.Klbrain (talk) 19:45, 30 August 2022 (UTC)Reply