MINERAL NAMES
|
Mineral/rock |
Derived from or for |
|
Actinolite |
Greek actino = ray and lithos = stone in reference to its occurrence in bundles of radiating needles |
|
Agalmatolite |
Greek algalma = image and lithos = stone as it was carved by the Chinese |
|
Agate |
locality at the River Achates, now Drillo in Sicily, where it was originally found |
|
Aggregate |
Latin aggregatus = to lead to a flock, add to |
|
Akageneite |
locality at Akagame mine, Iwate Prefecture, Japan |
|
Alabandite |
locality at Alabanda in Caria, Asia Minor |
|
Alabaster |
ancient ointment jars called alabastra and perhaps Alabastron in Egypt; alternatively from Egyptian a-la-baste = ship of the Goddess Ebaste = Bubaste |
|
Albite |
Latin albus = white, for its color |
|
Alexandrite |
Czar Alexander II (1818-1881) of Russia |
|
Allanite |
Thomas Allan (1777-1833), Scottish mineralogist and first observer |
|
Almandine (garnet) |
Alabanda, Asia Minor, where garnets were cut and polished |
|
Aluminum |
Latin alumen = alum, original name for natural aluminum sulfate |
|
Alunite |
Latin alumen = alum (see above) and French alun = alum |
|
Amazonite |
locality at Amazon River, South America |
|
Amber |
French ambre from Arabic anbar = ambergris (now obsolete) |
|
Amblygonite |
Greek amblys = dull, obtuse and gonia = angle, in reference to cleavage angle |
|
Amethyst |
Latin amethystus and Greek amethystos = not drunken as the stone and plant was thought to orevent intoxication |
|
Amosite |
acronym of Asbestos Mines of South Africa |
|
Analcime |
Greek analkis = without strength due to its weak electrical properties when heated or rubbed |
|
Anatase |
Greek anatasis = extension because of the greater length of the common pyramid as compared with other tetragonal minerals |
|
Andradite (garnet) |
J.B.d’Andrada e Silva (1763-1838), Brazilian mineralogist and first observer |
|
Anhydrite |
Greek anhydros = dry or without water |
|
Anorthite |
Greek for not straight, because of its triclinic symmetry |
|
Antimony |
Latin from Greek anti = against plus monos = a metal seldom found alone |
|
Andalusite |
locality at Andalusia, Spain |
|
Anthophyllite |
neo-Latin anthophyllum = clove for its brown color, Greek lithos = stone |
|
Apatite |
Greek apate = deceit since it was often mistaken for other minerals |
|
Aphthitalite |
Greek aphthitos = unchangeable or indestructible, alis = salt, and lithos = stone since it is very stable in air |
|
Aquamarine |
Latin aqua marina = seawater alluding to its pale bluish-green color |
|
Aragonite |
locality at Aragon, Spain, where it was first identified |
|
Arcanite |
Medieval Latin alchemical name, Arcanum duplicatum = double secret |
|
Asbestos |
Latin and Greek asbestos = inextinguishable alluding to its early uses as a wick |
|
Ascherite |
a.k.a Szaibelyle |
|
Atacamite |
locality at Atacama Desert, Chile |
|
Attapulgite |
locality at Attapulgus, Georgia, USA |
|
Axinite |
Greek axine = ax in reference to its wedge-shaped crystals |
|
Azoproit |
Russian title for the International Association for the Study of Deep Zones of the Earth’s Crust (AZOPRO) since it was found during the preparation of a guidebook for the Association’s meeting in Baikal in 1969 |
|
Baddeleyite |
Joseph Baddeley who brought the original specimens from Sri Lanka |
|
Ball clay |
from the tradition of rolling the clay to the cart and thus forming a “ball” weighing 13-22 kg (30-50 lb) with a diameter of about 25 cm (10 inches) |
|
Barite |
Greek barys = heavy or dense |
|
Barylite |
Greek barys = heavy or dense, lithos = stone |
|
Bassanite |
locality at Basset group of mines, Redruth, Cornwall, England |
|
Bastnaesite |
locality at Bastnäs, Vastmanland, Sweden |
|
Bauxite |
locality at Les Baux, near Arles, France where it was discovered by P. Berthierin |
|
Beidellite |
locality at Beidell, Colorado |
|
Bementite |
Clarence Sweet Bement (1843-1923), American machine tool manufacturer from Philadelphia; collector of coins, books, and minerals |
|
Benstonite |
for O.J. Benston (1901- ), American ore dressing metallurgist, National Lead Company, Malvern, AR, who provided specimens for initial study |
|
Bentonite |
for the Benton Shale named for Fort Benton, Montana, United States (originally named Taylorite for Taylor Ranch, the site of the first mine near Rock River, Wyoming, which opened in 1888) |
|
Bertrandite |
Marcel Alexandre Bertrand (1847-1907), French mineralogist |
|
Beryl |
Greek beryllos of uncertain etymology applied to beryl and green gems |
|
Beryllium |
beryl (see above), the mineral from which it was isolated |
|
Bikitaite |
locality at Bikita, Zimbabwe |
|
Biotite |
Jean Baptiste Biot (1774-1862), French physicist who studied its optical aspects |
|
Birnessite |
locality at Birness, Scotland |
|
Bischofite |
Gustav Bischof (1792-1870), German chemist and geologist |
|
Bixbyite |
Maynard Bixby of Salt Lake City, UT, who compiled a catalog of Utah minerals |
|
Blanc fixe |
French blanc = white and fixe = settled referring to the barium sulfate precipitate |
|
Bloedite |
Carl August Bloede (1773-1820), German chemist |
|
Boehmite |
Johannes Böhm (1857-1938), German geologist and first observer |
|
Boracite |
derived from borax (see below). A.k.a. |
|
Borax |
Persian burah and Arabic buraq, both old names for the mineral. A.k.a. tincal. |
|
Bradleyite |
Wilmot Hyde Bradley (b. 1899), American geologist, USGS |
|
Brannerite |
John Casper Branner (1850-1922), American geologist |
|
Braunite |
Kammerath Braun, of Gotha, Germany |
|
Brazilianite |
Brazil, where the mineral was first found |
|
Bromine |
Greek bromos = stench in reference to its characteristic odor |
|
Bromargyrite |
Greek bromos = stench and argyros = silver alluding to to composition |
|
Brookite |
Henry James Brooke (1771-1857), English mineralogist |
|
Brucite |
Archibald Bruce (1777-1818), American mineralogist and first observer |
|
Brüggenite |
Juan Brüggen (1887-1953), Chilean geologist |
|
Burkeite |
William Edmund Burke (1980-), American chemical engineer |
|
Cahnite |
Lazard Cahn (1865-1940), American mineral collector who first recognized the mineral in Franklin, New Jersey. |
|
Cairngorm |
locality at Cairngorm, southwest of Banff, Scotland |
|
Calcite |
Latin calx, calcis = lime; this is the same origin for chalk and limestone |
|
Carnallite |
Rudolph von Carnall (1804-1874), Prussian mining engineer, Greek lithos = stone |
|
Celestite |
Latin caelestis = heavenly for its faint blue color |
|
Cement |
Old French ciment from Latin caementum = chip of stone used to fill up in building a wall |
|
Cerite/Cerium |
after Ceris, an asteroid discovered in 1803 |
|
Chabazite (zeolite) |
Greek chabazios or chalazios, an ancient name of a stone celebrated in a poem ascribed to Orpheus |
|
Chalcedony |
from Chalcedon or Calchedon, an ancient maritime city of Bithynia on the Sea of Marmara in modern Turkey |
|
Chalcophanite |
Greek chalcos = copper and to appear refering to the change of color on ignition |
|
Chalcopyrite |
Greek chalcos = copper and its similarity with pyrite. |
|
Chaistolite |
Greek chiastos = marked with a chi (x) and lithos = stone alluding to the cross exhibited in transverse sections |
|
China clay |
commercial term for kaolin which was named for Kau-ling in China |
|
Chiolite |
Greek = snow alluding to its appearance and similarity to cryolite (ice) |
|
Chlorite |
Greek chloros = light green in reference to its color |
|
Chromite |
Greek chroma = a color for the brilliant hues of its compounds |
|
Chrysoberyl |
Greek chrysos = golden or yellow plus beryllos = beryl |
|
Chrysolite |
Greek chrysos = golden or yellow plus lithos = stone |
|
Chrysoprase |
Greek chrysos = golden or yellow plus prason = leek alluding to green color |
|
Chrysotile |
Greek chrysotos = guilded in reference to its color and nature |
|
Citrine |
Latin citrus or French citron = lemon in reference to its yellow color |
|
Clinoenstatite |
Greek klinein = to bend or slope (monoclinic diomorph) of enstates = an adversary because of its refractory nature |
|
Clinoptilolite |
Greek klinein = to bend or slope, monoclinic Greek for wing or down alluding to its light nature, and lithos = stone |
|
Colemanite |
William Tell Coleman (1824-1893), a borate developer in California |
|
Cordierite |
Pierre Louis A. Cordier (1777-1861), French mining engineer & geologist |
|
Coronadite |
for Francisco Vasquez de Coronado (ca. 1500-1554), Spanish explorer of SW America |
|
Corundum |
Hindi kurund, or the Tamil kurundam, describing a native stone of India |
|
Crandallite |
Milan L. Crandell Jr., American engineer, Knight Syndicate, Provo, Utah and Greek lithos = stone |
|
Cristobalite |
Cerro San Cristóbal near Pachuca, Mexico and Greek lithos = stone |
|
Crocidolite |
Greek krokis or krokidos = the nap on cloth and lithos = stone |
|
Cryolite |
Greek kryos = cold, frost and lithos = stone for its icy appearance |
|
Cryptomelane |
Greek kryptos = hidden, secret and melas = black in reference to the difficulty of identifying it as a species and its color |
|
Danburite |
locality at Danbury, Connecticut |
|
D’ Ansite |
Jean D’ Ans (1881- ), German chemist, professor, Berlin |
|
Darapskite |
for Ludwig Darapsky (1857-?), mineralogist and chemist from Santiago, Chile |
|
Datolite |
Greek = to divide due to granular character of some varieties |
|
Dawsonite |
John William Dawson (1820-1899), Canadian geologist, principal of McGill University, Montreal, Canada |
|
Diamond |
Latin adamas = unconquerable or invincible; first used in Manilius (AD 16) |
|
Diaspore |
Greek dia = through and speirein = to scatter in reference to its characteristic decrepitation on heating |
|
Dickite |
Allan Brugh Dick (1833-1926), Scottish metallurgical chemist |
|
Diatomite |
Latin from Greek dia = through and tome = cutting in reference to the two generally symmetrical valves of the single-cell diatom |
|
Dietzeite |
August Dietze (?-1893?), who first described the mineral |
|
Diopside |
Greek diopsis = to view through since it is usually transparent |
|
Dolomite |
Deodat Guy Silvain Tancrède Gratet de Dolomieu, French geologist |
|
Dumortierite |
Eugène Dumortier (1802-1873), French paleontologist |
|
Dunite |
named for its type locality at Dun Mountain, Nelson, New Zealand |
|
Dysprosium |
Greek dysprositos = hard to get at in reference to the difficulty of separation |
|
Embolite |
Greek embole = insert and lithos = stone since it contains both the chloride and bromide of silver |
|
Emerald |
Latin smaragdus and Greek smaragdos = emerald, probably of Semitic origin; ancient name applied to a variety of green minerals |
|
Emery |
French emeri, Italian smeriglio, and Greek smiris or smeris; akin to the Greek myron = urgent |
|
Epsomite |
locality at Epsom, a town near London, England |
|
Erionite (zeolite) |
Greek erion = wool alluding to its white wool-like appearance |
|
Euclase |
Greek eu = good, well and klasis = a breaking due to its easy cleavage |
|
Eucryplite |
Greek eu = good, and concealed due to its mode of occurrence embedded in albite |
|
Eudialyte |
Greek eu = good, well and dialytos = capable of dissolution |
|
Eudidymite |
Greek eu = good, well and twin, due to the twinned crystal |
|
Eugsterite |
N.A. |
|
Europium |
Continent of Europe named for Europa, daughter of a king of Phoenicia |
|
Euxenite |
Greek for friendly to strangers or hospitable referring to the rare-earth elements it contains |
|
Faujasite (zeolite) |
Barthélemy Faujas de Saint Fond (1741-1819), French geologist |
|
Fayalite |
locality at Fayal Island in the Azores and Greek lithos = stone |
|
Feitknechtite |
for Walter Feitknecht (1899- ), University of Bern, who first synthesized the compound |
|
Feldspar |
Swedish feldt or fält = field and spat = spar, for the spar in the tilled fields overlying granite |
|
Fergusonite |
Robert Ferguson (1799-1865), Scottish physician |
|
Ferrierite (zeolite) |
Walter Frederick Ferrier (1865-1950), Canadian geologist and moning engineer |
|
Ferronatrite |
Latin ferrum = iron and natrium = soda describing its composition |
|
Flint |
Greek plinthos = a brick |
|
Florencite |
Willian Florence (1964-1942), Brazilian mineralogist who studied minerals in Minas Gerais |
|
Fluoborite |
from composition, a fluoborate of magnesium |
|
Fluocerite |
containing fluorine and cerium named for Ceris, an asteroid |
|
Fluorapatite |
containing fluorine and apatite |
|
Fluorite |
Latin fluere = flow, then German flüssen = fuse (German flussspat) |
|
Forsterite |
Adolarius Jacob Forster (1739-1806), English mineral collector |
|
Francolite |
Wheal (= mine) Franco, Tavistock in Devon, England, Greek lithos = stone |
|
Fuller’s earth |
clay used by the fuller to degrease cloth in a process known as fulling |
|
Furgusonite |
|
|
Gadolinite |
Johan Gadolin (1760-1852), Finnish chemist and discoverer of yttrium |
|
Galena |
Latin galena = lead ore or dross remaining after melting lead |
|
Garnet |
Latin granatum = a pomegranate since it RESEMBLes their red seeds; alternatively Latin granatus = like a grain since it RESEMBLes seeds or grains embeded in the matrix |
|
Gaylussite |
Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac (1778-1850), French chemist, Greek lithos = stone |
|
Gibbsite |
George Gibbs (1776-1833), owner of the mineral collection acquired by Yale early in the 19th century |
|
Glaserite |
??? |
|
Glauberite |
Johann Wilhelm Glauber (1603-1668), German chemist |
|
Glauconite |
Greek glaucos = originally gleaming, later bluish green, silvery, or gray |
|
Goethite |
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), German poet/philosopher |
|
Graphite |
Greek for graphein = to write due to its use in making pencils |
|
Grossularite (garnet) |
Latin grossularium = gooseberry for its pale green color |
|
Groutite |
Frank Fitch Grout (1880-1958), American petrologist, U of Minnesota |
|
Guano |
Indian huanu = dung |
|
Gypsum |
from the Greek gypsos = plaster, an ancient name |
|
Hafnium |
Latin Hafnia = ancient name for Copenhagen |
|
Halite |
Greek hals = the sea (see salt) |
|
Halloysite |
Baron Omalius d’Halloy (1707-1789), Belgian geologist and first observer |
|
Hanksite |
Henry Garber Hanks (1826-1907), State Mineralogist of California |
|
Hausmannite |
Johann Friedrich Ludwig Hausmann (1782-1859), German mineralogist |
|
Hectorite |
locality at Hector, California, USA |
|
Heliodor |
Greek helios = sun — “gift of the sun”. |
|
Helvite |
Greek helvus = light yellow alluding to the mineral’s color |
|
Hematite |
Greek haimatites = bloodlike alluding to its red color |
|
Hessonite |
Greek ésson = inferior in reference to its inferior hardness and color |
|
Heulandite |
John Henry Heuland (1778-1856), English mineral collector |
|
Hiddenite |
A.E. Hidden, mine owner and first observer |
|
Hollandite |
Thomas Henry Holland (1868-1947), British geologist, Director of Geol. Survey of India |
|
Holmium |
Latin Holmia = ancient name for Stockholm |
|
Howlite |
Henry How (1828-1879), Canadian chemist and first observer |
|
Huntite |
Walter Frederick Hunt (1882-1975), American mineralogist, U of Michigan, Ann Arbor |
|
Hydroboracite |
Greek hydor = water plus boracite |
|
Illite |
locality in the state of Illinois, USA |
|
Ilmenite |
locality at the Ilmen Mountains, former USSR, where it was first located |
|
Inderborite |
Inder Lake, western Kazakhstan and composition of borate. |
|
Inderite |
Inder Lake, western Kazakhstan |
|
Inyoite |
Inyo County, California |
|
Iodine |
Greek iodes = violet alluding to its color |
|
Jacobsite |
locality at Jacobsberg, Wermland, Sweden |
|
Jade/jadeite |
Spanish term piedra de yjada = stone of the side since the stone was supposed to cure side pains |
|
Jarosite |
Jaroso Ravine in the Sierra Almagrera, Spain |
|
Jasper |
Latin iaspis, which is of oriental origin, equivalent to the Persian iashm and jashp and the Assyrian ashpu |
|
Kainite |
Greek kainos = new, recent alluding to its recent (secondary) formation |
|
Kaliborite |
composition, kalium = potassium, and boron = borate |
|
Kandite |
comprising the minerals kaolinite, nacrite, and dickite |
|
Kaolin |
Chinese Kau-ling = high ridge, a village in northwest Jiangxi Province, China, where deposits of white kaolin have long been exploited to make fine white porcelain known as china (see china clay) |
|
Kermesite |
from kermes, a name given in old chemistryto red amorphous antiminy trisulfide often mixed with antimony trioxide |
|
Kernite |
locality at Kern County, California |
|
Kieselguhr |
German kiesel = flint and guhr = earthy sediment deposited in water |
|
Kieserite |
Dietrich Georg Kieser (1779-1862), President of Jena Acadamy, Germany |
|
Kornerupine |
Andreas Nikolaus Kornerup (1857-1881), Danish geologist |
|
Kotoite |
Bundjirom Koto (1856-1935), Japanese geologist and petrographer, U of Tokyo |
|
Kramerite |
locality at Kramer boron deposit, California. A.k.a. probertite. |
|
Kurnakovite |
Nikolai Semenovich Kurnakov (1860-1941), Russian mineralogist |
|
Kunzite |
G.F. Kunz, American mineralogist |
|
Kyanite |
Greek kyanos = dark blue reflecting its color |
|
Labradorite |
the mineral was first brought from the Isle of Paul, Labrador, about 1770 |
|
Langbeinite |
A. Langbein, German chemist of Leopoldshall |
|
Lanthanum |
Greek lanthanein = to be unseen, unnoticed, or concealed |
|
Lapis lazuli |
Latin lapis = a stone and Persian lazhward = blue color |
|
Laumontite (zeolite) |
François Pierre Nicolas Giller de Laumont (1747-1834), French discoverer |
|
Lautarite |
locality at Oficina Lautaro, Antofagasta Province, Chile |
|
Lecontite |
John Lawrence LeConte (1825-1883), American entomologist of Philadelphia who discovered the mineral |
|
Leonite |
Leo Strippelmann, director of the salt work at Westerregeln, Germany |
|
Lepidocrocite |
Greek lepis = scale in reference to the scaly or feathery habit, and (Latin) crocinus = saffron, golden, yellow for its color |
|
Lepidolite |
Greek lepis = scale and lithos = stone because of its micaceous structure |
|
Leucite |
Greek leukos = white reflecting its whire or gray color |
|
Leucoxene |
Greek leukos = white and xenos = stranger alluding to its color and secondary nature |
|
Lime |
Old English; related to Dutch iljm & Latin limus = mud, linere = to smear |
|
Limonite |
Greek leimon = meadow since it often occurs in bogs and swamps |
|
Lithiophilite |
Greek lithos = stone and philos = loving alluding to its composition |
|
Lithiophorite |
Greek lithos = stone and to bear in reference to its lithium content |
|
Lithium |
Greek lithos = stone |
|
Loeweite |
Alexander Loewe (1808-1846), German chemist |
|
Loparite |
Russian name for the Lapp inhabitants of the Kola Peninsula |
|
Ludwigite |
Ernst Ludwig (1842-1915), Austrian chemist, U of Vienna |
|
Lutetium |
Lutetia, the ancient name for Paris |
|
Maghemite |
from the fisrt syllables of magmetite and hematite referring to the magnetism and and composition |
|
Magnesite |
see magnesium; applied to a series of magnesium salts by J.C. Delanethrie in 1795; D.L.G. Karsten first restricted it to the natural carbonate in 1808 |
|
Magnesium/ magnesia |
Possibly Latin magnesia, a mineral said to be brought from the province of Magnesia in Thessaly, Greece > magnesia alba > “magnesia” and “magnesium” (magnesia negra > “manganese”); See manganese. |
|
Magnetite |
Middle Latin magnes = magnet in reference to its magnetic properties; or from Magnes, a shepherd who first discovered the mineral on Mount Ida when the rock was attracted to the nails in his shoes |
|
Manganese |
Possibly Latin magnesia, a mineral said to be brought from the province of Magnesia in Thessaly, Greece > magnesia negra and corrupted to “manganese” (in common with magnesia alba > “magnesia” and “magnesium”; alternatively Greek mangania = magic. See magnesium/magnesia. |
|
Manganite |
manganese content (see above) |
|
Marble |
Greek marmairein = to shine, marmaros = white glistening stone |
|
Marcasite |
probably Arabic or Moorish for pyrite and similar substances |
|
Mayenite |
locality near Mayen, Eifel district Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany |
|
Meerschaum |
Greek meer = sea and schaum = froth for its light weight and color |
|
Mendozite |
Mendoza, Argentina |
|
Meyerhofferite |
Wilhelm Meyerhoffer (1864-1906), German chemist |
|
Mica |
Latin micare = to shine or to glitter or the Latin mica = a crumb or grain |
|
Microcline |
Greek mikro = little and klinein = to incline in reference to its characteristic variation of cleavage angle from 90o |
|
Millisite |
F.T. Mills, of Lehi, Utah, the first observer |
|
Mirabilite |
Latin sal mirabilis = wonderful salt, Greek lithos = stone |
|
Mohavite |
Mohave desert, California. A.k.a. tincalconite. |
|
Monazite |
Greek monazein = to be alone alluding to its rarity |
|
Montebrasite |
locality at Mintebras, Creuse, France |
|
Montmorillonite |
locality at Montmorillon, Vienne, France |
|
Mordenite (zeolite) |
Morden, King’s County, Nova Scotia, Canada |
|
Morganite |
John Pierpont Morgan, American banker and gem enthusiast |
|
Mullite |
locality at the island of Mull, Scotland, Greek lithos = stone |
|
Muscovite |
Muscovy glass, when first described from Muscovy Province, Russia |
|
Nahcolite |
acronym of Na, H, C, O plus Greek lithos = stone |
|
Natrolite (zeolite) |
Latin natrium or Greek natron = native soda plus lithos = stone |
|
Natron |
Latin natrium or Greek nitron = native soda |
|
Neodymium |
Greek neos = new and didymos = twin |
|
Nepheline |
Greek nephele = cloud alluding to the cloudy appearance developed on immersing nepheline in strong acid |
|
Nephrite |
Latin lapis nephriticus = kidney stone since it was often worn to remedy diseases of the kidnies |
|
Nesquehonite |
Nesquehoning near Lansford, Carbon County, Pennsylvania |
|
Niter/Nitrates |
ancient origin: Latin nitrum, the Greek for nitron, the Hebrew nether; perhaps originally from Nitria, a city in Upper Egypt |
|
Nontronite |
locality at Arrondissement of Nontron, near the village of Saint Pardoux, France |
|
Northupite |
Charles H. Northup (b. 1861), American grocer and first observer |
|
Novaculite |
Latin novacula = razor hone alluding to its use as a sharpening stone |
|
Nsutite |
locality at the Nsuta Mine, Ghana |
|
Ochre |
Latin and Greek ochra = pale or pale yellow alluding to its color |
|
Offertite (zeolite) |
Albert Jules Joseph Offret (1857-?), professor, Lyons, France |
|
Olivine |
Latin oliva = olive alluding to its olive green color |
|
Onyx |
Greek onyx = claw, fingernail, hoof in reference to the color |
|
Opal |
from Sanskrit upala = stone or precious stone |
|
Orthoclase |
Greek for straight and klasis = fracture in reference to its cleavage angle of 90° |
|
Palygorskite |
locality at “in der Paligorischen Distanz” of the second mine on the Popovka River, Urals, former USSR, where it was observed |
|
Pandermite |
locality at Panderma, the old name for Bandirma, a port in Turkey |
|
Parisite |
J.J. Paris, proprietor of the mine at Muzo, north of Bogata, Colombia, where the mineral was discovered |
|
Peat |
Anglo-Latin peta = piece of turf |
|
Pentlandite |
Joseph Barclay Pentland (1797-1873), Irish natural scientist and traveler |
|
Periclase |
Greek peri = around and klasis = fracture due to its perfect cubic cleavage |
|
Peridot |
French péridot of unknown origin |
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Perlite |
French perle = pearl due to its pearly luster and form when hammered |
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Perovskite |
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Petalite |
Greek petalon = leaf and lithos = stone alluding to its leaflike cleavage |
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Phenak(c)ite |
Greek phenax = to cheat since it was often mistaken for quartz |
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Phengite |
Greek and Latin phengites = shine in reference to its luster |
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Phillipsite (zeolite) |
William Phillips (1775-1829), British mineralogist, founder of the Geological Society of London |
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Phlogopite |
Greek phlogistos = to burn or inflame alluding to its reddish tinge |
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Phonolite |
Greek phone = sound and lithos = stone in reference to its ring when struck with a hammer |
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Phosphate |
Greek for phos = light and phoros = bearer due to its spontaneous combustion; frpm the Latin meaning morning star |
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Pinnoite |
Mt. Pinno, Chief Councellor of Mines, of Halle, Germany |
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Pirssonite |
Louis Valentine Pirsson (1860-1919), American mineralogist at Yale |
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Plagioclase |
Greek plagios = oblique and klasis = fracture in reference to the oblique angles between its best cleavages |
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Plumbago |
Latin plumbum = lead since graphite was misidentified as galena |
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Pinite |
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Polianite |
N.A. |
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Pollucite |
Pollux, the twin brother of Castor in Classical mythology, in reference to its association with the mineral castor (old name for petalite) |
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Polyhalite |
Greek polys = much or many and hals = salt due to the component salts |
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Portland cement |
resembles a building stone on the Isle of Portland, Dorset, England |
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Portlandite |
from Portland cement, locality at the Isle of Portland, Dorset, England, with which the synthetic compound was known to be associated |
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Potash |
from pot and ash, originally prepared by evaporating the lixivium of wood ashes in iron pots (see soda ash) |
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Pozzalana |
locality at Pozzuoli near Mount Vesuvius where a tuff was extracted by the Romans |
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Praeseodymium |
Greek prasios = green and didymos = twin |
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Priceite |
Thomas Price (b. 1837?), Welsh-American mineralogist. A.k.a Pandemite. |
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Probertite |
Frank Holman Probert (1876-1940), Dean of the Mining College, U of Cal. A.k.a. kramerite. |
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Promethium |
Prometheus, a Titan in Greek mythology, who made a man of clay from fire stolen from heaven |
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Psilomene |
Greek psilos = naked, bare and melas = black alluding to its appearance |
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Pumice |
Latin pumex = pumice or porous stone from spuma = foam |
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Pyrrhotite |
Greek for redness aluding to the liveliness of its color |
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Pyrite |
Greek pyrites = flint or millstone from pyros = a fire since it gives off sparks when struck |
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Pyrochlore |
Greek pyros = a fire and chloros = green since it turns green on ignition |
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Pyrolusite |
Greek pyros = a fire and lusite = to wash due to its use to decolorize glass |
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Pyrope (garnet) |
Greek pyr = fire and ops = eye alluding to its fire-red color |
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Pyrophyllite |
Greek for pyro = a fire, phyllo = a leaf, and lithos = stone referring to the effect of heat separating the laminae in foliated varieties |
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Quartz |
Saxon word querkluftertz = cross-vein ore; first condensed to querertz; or West Slavic word kwardy |
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Ramsdellite |
Lewis Stephen Ramsdell (1895-1975), American mineralogist, U of Michigan, Ann Arbor |
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Rare earths |
named by Johann Gadolin as a literal description of a group of elements |
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Rhodochrosite |
Greek rhodochros = rose colored alluding to its color |
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Rhodonite |
Greek rhodon = a rose alluding to its color |
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Roseki |
Japanese for waxy stone referring to its wax-like appearance. |
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Roscoelite |
Henry Enfield Roscoe (1833-1915), a chemist from Manchester, England, who first to prepared pure vanadium |
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Ruby |
Latin rubeus = red alluding to its color |
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Rutile |
French shining from Latin rutilus = red alluding to its color |
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Sanbornite |
for Frank Sanborn, American mineralogist. Div. Mines, Dept. Natural Resources, CA |
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Sanidine |
Greek sanis (-idos) = a board, a table in reference to the mineral’s tabular habit |
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Salt |
Latin sal which originated from the Greek for hals = the sea (see halite) |
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Samarskite |
Vasilii Erafovich Samarski-Bykhovets (1803-1870), of the Russian Corps of Mining Engineers |
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Saponite |
Latin sapo (-idos) = soap for its soaplike appearance |
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Sapphire |
ancient name of uncertain origin; possibly Hebraic sappir and Sanskrit sanipruja; applied by the ancients to lazurite |
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Sassolite |
Sasso, Tuscany, Italy where first observed, Greek lithos = stone |
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Searlesite |
John W. Searles, Californian pioneer; Searles Lake, CA, named for him |
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Selenite |
Greek selenites (lithos) = moon (stone) since it was supposed to wax and wane with the moon and/or it has moon-like white reflections |
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Sellaite |
Quntino Sella (1827-1884), Italian mining engineer and mineralogist |
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Senarmonite |
Henri Hureau de Sénarmont (1808-1862), French physicist and mineralogist, School of Mines, Paris, who first described the species |
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Sepiolite |
Greek sepion = the bone of the cuttle-fish and lithos = stone since the bone of the cuttle-fish is light and porous like the mineral |
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Sericite |
Greek for silky alluding to its silky luster |
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Serpentine |
Latin serpens = snake because of the similar surface patterns |
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Shortite |
Maxwell Naylor Short (1889-1952), American mineralogist, U of Arizona, and Greek lithos = stone |
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Siderite |
Greek sideros = iron in reference to its composition |
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Sienna |
locality at the town of Sienna in Tuscany, northern Italy |
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Silica |
Latin silex = flint |
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Sillimanite |
Professor Benjamin Silliman (1779-1864), American mineralogist, Yale |
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Slate |
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Smectite |
Greek smektis = fuller’s earth from smechein = to wipe off, to cleanse because of its property of extracting grease from cloth (see Fuller’s Earth) |
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Soda |
possibly from the name of a mineral that occurs near Djebel es Soda, Libya. Alternatively, the Spanish soda (from the Arabian suvvad = a plant from the ash of which soda was obtained in Sicily and Spain), or from the medieval Latin sodanum = a remedy for headaches (from the Arabic suda = headache). |
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Soda ash |
from soda and ash, originally prepared by evaporating the lixivium of wood ashes in iron pots (see potash) |
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Sodalite |
from composition, Latin solidus = solid since it was a solid used in glassmaking (see soda ash) |
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Sodium sulfate |
chemical name |
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Spessartine (garnet) |
locality at Spessart in northwestern Bavaria, Germany |
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Sphalerite |
Greek for trecherous or slippery since it was often mistaken for galena but yielded no lead |
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Sphene |
Greek for wedge due to characteristic habit of the crystals |
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Spinel |
Latin spinella = little thorn referring to its spine-shaped octahedral crystals |
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Spodumene |
Greek spodoun = to reduce to ashes refers either to its ash-gray color or the ash-colored mass formed when heated before the blowpipe |
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Stassfurtite |
locality at Stassfurt, Germany, where it is associated with potash. A.k.a. boracite |
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Staurolite |
Greek stauros = a cross and lithos = stone because of its common cruciform twins |
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Steatite |
Greek steatos = suet |
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Stibiconite |
Greek stimmi and Latin stibium = antimony and Greek for powder or dust, because it often occurs as a powder |
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Stibnite |
Greek stimmi and Latin stibium = old names for antimony |
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Strontianite |
locality at Strontian, a small town in Argyllshire, Scotland |
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Suanite |
locality at Suan County, Korea |
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Sulfur |
Latin sulfur, an old name; akin to Sanskrit sulvere |
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Sulphohalite |
from composition, a sulfate with the halogen elements Cl and F |
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Suzorite |
locality at Suzor Township near Boucherville, Quebec, Canada (phlogopite mica) |
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Sylvite |
old chemical name Sal digestivus Sylvii or digestive salt of Francois Sylvius de la Boë (1614-1672), Dutch chemist and physician of Leyden |
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Syngenite |
Greek syn = with, together with, or related to in reference to its similarity to polyhalite |
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Szaibelyite |
Stephan Szaibely (1777-1855), Hungarian mine surveyor of Rézbánya. A.k.a. ascherite |
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Talc |
Arabic talq |
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Tamarugite |
locality at Tamarugal, Pampa, Chile |
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Tanzanite |
locality at Tanzania, Africa |
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Tephroiite |
Greek for ash-colored due to its color |
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Teruggite |
Mario E. Teruggi, geologist, Universitatd Nacional La Plata, Argentina |
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Thenardite |
Louis Jacques Thénard (1777-1857), French chemist, U of Paris |
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Thermonatrite |
Greek therme = heat and natron = soda since it forms from drying soda |
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Thorium |
Thor, Scandinavian god of thunder and lightening in reference to its use in energy |
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Thulite |
Thule, the ancient name of Scandinavia |
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Tincal |
Sanskrit tincal or Malay tingkal = borax. A.k.a. borax. |
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Tincalconite |
Sanskrit tincal = borax and Greek konis = dust or powder; the fact it can form from the dehydration of borax A.k.a. mohavite. |
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Titanium/ |
Latin Titani and Greek Titanes = a Titan, in Greek mythology any one of twelve children of Uranus ( Heaven) and Gaea (Earth); denotes strength |
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Todorokite |
locality at the Todoroki mine, Hokkaido, Japan |
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Topaz |
from the Greek Topazion, an island in the Red Sea, meaning to seek since the island was often covered in mist |
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Toseki |
Japanese meaning “stones used for pocelain raw material (pottery stone) |
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Tourmaline |
Singhalese turamali = originally applied to zircon and other gems by jewelers in Sri Lanka |
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Tremolite |
locality at Tremola Valley, near St. Gotthard, Switzerland, and Greek lithos = stone |
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Tridymite |
Greek tridymos = threefold since the crystals are often trillings |
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Tripoli |
locality at Tripoli, Libya, in North Africa |
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Trona |
Arabic name of the native salt |
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Tsavolite |
locality at Tsavo National Park, Kenya , first discovered, and Greek lithos = stone |
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Tunellite |
George Tunell (1900- ), American geochemist, U of California, Los Angeles |
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Turquoise |
Old French turqueise = Turkish as stones came to Europe from Persia via Turkey |
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Tychite |
in Greek mythology Tyche = the Goddess of Chance alluding to the fact that two tychite crystals in a stock of 5,000 northupite crystals were the first and the last to be found |
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Tysonite |
S.T. Tyson who collected and supplied the specimens in the original study |
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Ulexite |
George Ludwig Ulex (1811-1883), German chemist and first observer |
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Umber |
locality at the Umbria idistrict of Italy or possibly Latin umbra = a shade or shadow |
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Uralborite |
locality at Ural Mountains in the former USSR and its borate content |
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Uvarovite (garnet) |
Count Sergei Semeonovich Uvarov (1786-1855), Russian nobleman, Imperial Academy of St. Petersburg |
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Valentinite |
Basilius Valentinus (pseudonym for Johannes Thölde), German alchemist working on the properties of antimony in the late 17th and early 18th century. |
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Vanthoffite |
Jacobus Hendricus van ‘tHoff (1852-1911), Dutch physical chemist |
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Veatchite |
Dr. John A. Veatch who first discovered boracic acid in northern Californian springs |
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Vermiculite |
Latin vermiculare = to breed worms alluding to its appearance after exfoliation and Greek lithos = stone |
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Vernadite |
Vladimir Ivanovich Vernadskii (1863-1945), Russian naturalist and geochemist |
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Vesuvianite |
locality at Mt. Vesuvius, Italy, where it was found in ejected blocks |
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Villiaumite |
French explorer Villiaume who brought the specimen from Guinea |
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Vonsenite |
Magnus Vonsen (1879-1954), American mineral collector of Petaluma, CA, who was interested in borate minerals. A.k.a. paigeite. |
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Wad |
provincial English word for black, soft powders of unknown origin |
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Wairakite |
locality at Wairakei in the central part of the North Island, New Zealand |
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Wardite |
Henry Augustus Ward (1834-1906), American naturalist, Rochester, NY |
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Wavellite |
William Wavell (d.1829), English physician, Horwood Parish, Devon, UK, and Greek lithos = stone |
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Wegscheiderite |
Rudolph Wegscheider, chemist who formed the compound synthetically |
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Witherite |
William Withering (1741-1799), English physician, botanist & mineralogist |
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Wollastonite |
William Hyde Wollaston (1766-1828), English chemist and mineralogist |
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Xenotime |
Greek xenos = foreign, a stranger and time = to honor alluding to the fact that crystals are small and rare, and were long unnoticed; originally mispelled kenotime, Greek for vain and to honor |
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Ytterbium/yttrium |
locality at Ytterby, Sweden |
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Zeolites |
Greek zein = to boil and lithos = stone (i.e. boiling stones) |
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Zinnwaldite |
locality at Zinnwald, Bohemia, itself named for the local tin (German Zinn) veins |
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Zircon |
from Arabic zarqun, derived from the Persian zar = gold and gun = color |
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Zoisite |
Siegmund Zois, Baron von Edelstein (1747-1819), Austrian scholar |
Sources: Fleischer, M, 1975, Glossary of Mineral Species; Lyman, K., ed., 1984, Simon & Schuster’s Guide to Gems and Precious Stones; Mitchell, R.S., 1979, Mineral Names What Do They Mean?; Spencer, L.J., M.H. Hay, et al, various dates, “Annual lists of new mineral names”, Mineralogical Magazine; Chambers Etymological English Dictionary; Encyclopaedia Britannica; Webster’s New Twentieth Century Dictionary (unabridged). |
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