Timeline of the discovery and classification of minerals

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Nickel-Strunz identifier (updated 9th ed.). Nowadays, non-destructive electron microprobe analysis is used to get the empirical formula of a mineral. Finally, the International Zeolite Association (IZA) took care of the zeolite frameworks (part of molecular sieves
and/or molecular cages).

There are only a few thousand mineral species and 83 geochemically stable chemical elements combine to form them (84 elements, if

Jack Zussman
.

Milestones

Neolithic Age, and after it

Olive green peridot (syn. chrysolite)
Nephrite dish – House of Fabergé (1890s)

Greco-Roman and Byzantine period, mainly

  • Greco-Roman period:
    • De Anima Libri III of Aristotle (4th century BC). Description of mercury (metal).
    • Theophrastus (c. 371 – c. 287 BC)
      • Theophrastus (1956). Theophrastus On Stones: Introduction, Greek text, English translation, and Commentary (315 BC). Translated by John F. Richards, Earle Radcliffe Caley. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University. p. 238.
      • Illustration: amber (lyncurion of Theophrastus), chrysocolla, agate, cinnabar, orpiment, realgar. First brass (calamine plus copper process) appears in the middle of first century BC in the Roman Imperium, zircon and tourmalines are not found on ancient art works.
    • The oldest known pills were made of the zinc carbonates hydrozincite (described 1853) and smithsonite (described 1832). Calamine is a historic name for an ore of zinc (hemimorphite (IMA1962 s.p.) and smithsonite).[6]
    • De architectura (about 15 BC) of Marcus Vitruvius Pollio, Libri X, vol. VII, Caput 8. Note: description of natural mercury from the Cilbian fields near the former Greek city of Ephesus.
    • Dioscorides, Pedanius (1557). "Liber v" (PDF). De materia medica (in Latin). Translated by Cornarius J. Basileae: Froben. pp. 454–455. Book V: Minerals, description of melanterite (50 AD) and chalcanthite (70 AD).
    • Naturalis Historia [The Natural History]: (77 AD) of Gaius Plinius Secundus (Pliny the Elder
      , 23 AD – 25 August 79 AD).
    • Pliny the Younger (61 – c. 113 AD), Epistulae (Letters): description of calcite and beryl.[7][8]
  • Damigeron de Lapidibus, "Orphei Lithica" (c. IV AD) [translated to Latin by Eugenius Abel, 1881]. Note: describes curing of ailments by 30 stones.[9]
  • Isidore of Seville (c. 600 AD) Etymologiae.
  • Turkish traveller Muḥammad Abū'l-Qāsim Ibn Ḥawqal: Ibn Hawqal (977 AD) "The Face of the Earth".[10]
  • Abū al-Rayhān Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Bīrūnī (973–1048): Al-Biruni (1000) The Book Most Comprehensive in Knowledge On Precious Stones. He considers "zarnarrud" (emerald) and "zabarjad" (peridot) the same mineral.[10]
  • Uzbek (Persian) scholar and physician, Avicenna (about 980 – June 1037). He wrote almost 450 treatises on a wide range of subjects, of which around 240 have survived.
  • Illustration, elements known to the ancients (about 1000 AD,
    timeline of chemical elements discoveries): carbon, sulfur, iron, arsenic, antimony, zinc, copper, lead, silver, tin
    , gold, mercury.
  • Marbode (1100).[10]
  • Anglicus, Bartholomeus
    (1240). "Liber xvi – De lapidibus et metallis" [Book XVI – On rocks, gems and minerals]. De proprietatibus rerum [On the Properties of Things].
  • Albertus Magnus (Albert the Great, 1193/1206 – 15 November 1280). Isolation of arsenic.
  • Prior to the Spanish conquest (1492):
  • Illustration:
    • Realgar from Arabic "rahj al-gahr" (powder of the mine). Salammoniac (άλς άμμωυιακός: sals ammonikos, salt of Ammon), for rocksalt mined by Amun's Temple, Egypt. Trabzonite (IMA1983-071a) for Trabzon, Turkey (Τραπεζοῦς: Trapezous, Trebizond).
    • There are three large peridots probably from the 12th century in the Shrine of the Three Magi in Cologne Cathedral, they were believed to be emeralds.[10]
    • Edward of Woodstock
      (the "Black Prince").

After the fall of Constantinople (after 1453)

Paracelsus (birth place: near Devil's bridge), commemorative plaque.
Front page of De re metallica, liber XII.

Lavoisier, Werner, Haüy, Klaproth, Berzelius and Dalton (after 1715)

René Just Haüy: Traité de Minéralogie – Tome cinquième (1801)
  • Georg Brandt (26 June 1694 – 29 April 1768), discovery of cobalt (c. 1735).
  • Johan Gottschalk Wallerius (1709–1785). Note: he renamed Agricola's Lupi spuma (1546, tungsten, element symbol -W-), in Wolfrahm (German, 1747).
    • Wallerius J G (1747). Mineralogia, eller mineralriket indelt och beskrifvet. Stockholm.
    • Wallerius J G; Denso J D (1750). Mineralogie, oder Mineralreich. Berlin: Berlegts Christoph Gottlieb Nicolai.
  • Johann F. Henckel (1678–1744), his library was the origin of the Freiberg Mining Academy.
    • Johann F. Henckel (1756). Kleine Minerologische und Chymische Schriften. Dresden/Leipzig.
  • Saxony had to pay reparations after the Seven Years' War: the mining industry got stronger and the Freiberg Mining Academy was founded (1765).
  • Tree of Life
    .
    • Note: first description of dolomite. The binomial nomenclature could not be used for minerals; it is easier to administrate c. 5,000 valid minerals (the species of the Tree of Life are relatives of each other. A mineral classification needs the contributions of: Nicolas Steno, Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier, Jean-Baptiste L. Romé de l'Isle, René Just Haüy, John Dalton, Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev, August Kekulé, Victor Goldschmidt, chemical formula and unit cell structure, etc.
  • T. Olof Bergman (1784). Manuel du minéralogiste, ou sciagraphie du règne minéral. Note: founder of analytical chemistry
    .
  • Daniel Rutherford (1749–1819), isolation of nitrogen (1772).
  • Ignaz von Born (1790). Catalogue Methodique et Raisonné de la Collection des Fossiles de Mlle. Éléonore De Raab.
  • Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier (26 August 1743 – 8 May 1794), naming of oxygen (1778) and hydrogen (1783), prediction of silicon (1778) and establishment of sulfur
    as an element (1777).
  • Johann F. Gmelin (1793). "Liber iii – Regnum Lapideum". Caroli a Linné systema naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis (13th ed.). Leipzig: Georg Emanuel Beer. Note: first description of mellite.
  • Vauquelin, Louis (1798). "Sur une nouvell terre tirée de l´aigue marine, ou beril". Observations Sur la Physique, Sur l'Histoire Naturelle et Sur les Arts. 46: 158. Note: René Haüy discovered that emeralds and beryls crystals are geometrically identical. He asked Vauquelin for a chemical analysis, and so Vauquelin found a new "earth" (beryllium oxide).
  • Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1742 –1786), discovery of oxygen with Priestley; identification of molybdenum, tungsten, barium, hydrogen, and chlorine.
  • Jean-Baptiste L. Romé de l'Isle (1783). Cristallographie (2nd ed.). Note: 3 volumes and atlas.
  • Carl Abraham Gerhard (1786). Grundriß des Mineralsystems. Himburg. p. 310. Note: based on the Abraham Gottlob Werner's lectures.
  • Axel Fredrik Cronstedt (1788). An Essay Towards a System of Mineralogy. London. Note: 2 volumes.
  • Christian F. Ludwig (1803). Handbuch der Mineralogie nach A. G. Werner. Leipzig: Siegfried Lebrécht Crusius.
  • Jean-Claude de la Métherie (1743–1817):
    • Jean-Claude de la Métherie (1797). Théorie de la Terre (2nd ed.). Paris: Maradan. Note: 5 volumes, it cites René Just Haüy.
    • Jean-Claude de la Métherie (1812). Leçons de minéralogie: données au Collège de France. Paris: Mme. Ve. Courcier. Note: 2 volumes.
  • Christian August Siegfried Hoffmann (1760–1813):
    • C. A. S. Hoffmann (1789). "Mineralsystem des Herrn Inspektor Werners mit dessen Erlaubnis herausgegeben von C A S Hoffmann". Bergmännisches Journal. 1. Note: based on the Abraham Gottlob Werner's lectures, as well.
    • C. A. S. Hoffmann (1811). Handbuch der Mineralogie. Freiberg: Craz und Gerlach. Note: years later Breithaupt expanded it (1841).
  • Johann Gottfried Schmeisser (1795). A System of Mineralogy: formed chiefly on the plan of Cronstedt.
  • Johan Gadolin (5 June 1760 – 15 August 1852), discovery of yttrium (1789).
  • Kirwan, Richard (1794–1796). Elements of Mineralogy (2nd ed.). London.
  • Dietrich Ludwig Gustav Karsten (1768–1810):
    • Karsten D L G (1789). Des Herrn Nathanael Gottfried Leske hinterlassenes Mineralienkabinett, systematisch geordnet und beschrieben, auch mit vielen wissenschaftlichen Anmerkungen und mehreren äussern Beschreibungen der Fossilien begleitet. Leipzig. Note: mineral collection organized by Nathanael Gottfried Leske and Abraham Gottlob Werner.
    • Estner F J A; Werner A G; Karsten D L G; Leske N G (1790). Frenmüthige Gedanken über Herrn Inspector Werners Berbesserungen in der Mineralogie: nebst einigen Bemerkungen über Herrn Assessor Karstens Beschreibung des vom sel. Leske hinterlassenen Mineralien-Cabinetts. Vienna: Wappler.
    • Karsten D L G (1800). Mineralogische Tabellen. Berlin: Heinrich August Rottmann.
  • René Just Haüy (1743–1822): He is "father of modern crystallography".
    • René Just Haüy (1801). Traité de Minéralogie. Note: 5 volumes.
    • René Just Haüy (1822). Traité de Cristallographie. Note: 2 volumes.
  • William Gregor (25 December 1761 – 11 June 1817), discovery of titanium (1791).
  • Martin Heinrich Klaproth (1 December 1743 – 1 January 1817), discovery of uranium (1789), zirconium (1789); establishment of tellurium, strontium, cerium and chromium.
  • Jöns Jacob Berzelius (20 August 1779 – 7 August 1848), discovery of silicon (1824), selenium (1817), thorium (1858), and cerium (1803, with Klaproth).
  • John Dalton (1766–1844), British physicist and chemist (Dalton's atomic theory, 1800 and later).
  • French physicist André-Marie Ampère (1775–1836) suggests the element fluorine (1810).
  • Sir Humphry Davy, 1st Baronet (17 December 1778 – 29 May 1829), discovery of sodium (1807), potassium (1807), calcium (1808), magnesium (1808), boron (1808); isolation of chlorine (1810), barium (1808); identification of aluminium.
  • Amedeo Avogadro proposes the Avogadro's law (1811).[21]
  • Johann Friedrich Ludwig Hausmann (1813). Handbuch der Mineralogie. Göttingen. Note: 3 volumes.
  • Johann Christoph Ullmann
    (1814). Eine systematisch-tabellarische Uebersicht der mineralogisch-einfachen Fossilien. Kassel and Marburg: Kriedgerschen Buchhandlung.

Maxwell, periodic table, electron and mole (after 1815)

Herbert Hoover and his wife Lou Henry Hoover

100 years 'American Mineralogist' (after 1915)

Cameca
Science & Metrology Solutions' as MS85

International Mineralogical Association period (after 1957)

Iowaite (IMA1967-002). Size: 1.4 cm x 0.9 cm x 0.2 cm. Locality: Palabora mine, Loolekop, Phalaborwa, Limpopo Province, South Africa.

IMA Master List of Valid Minerals period (after 1999)

After 100 years 'American Mineralogist' (after 2015)

Beginnings of the 'IMA Master List of Minerals'

Handbooks on mineralogy/ petrology

The System of Mineralogy of James D. Dana

Glossary of Mineral Species

  • Fleischer, Michael (1966). "Index of New Mineral Names, Discredited Minerals, and Changes of Mineralogical Nomenclature in Volumes 1–50 of The American Mineralogist in Table 1. Alphabetical Index of New Mineral Names, Discredited Minerals, and Changes of Mineralogical Nomenclature, Volumes 1–50 (1916–1965), The American Mineralogist". American Mineralogist. 51 (8): 1251–1326.[54]
  • Fleischer, Michael (1971). Glossary of Mineral Species (1 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record.
  • Fleischer, Michael (1975). Glossary of Mineral Species (2 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record.
  • Fleischer, Michael (1980). Glossary of Mineral Species (3 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record.
  • Fleischer, Michael (1983). Glossary of Mineral Species (4 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record.
  • Fleischer, Michael (1987). Glossary of Mineral Species (5 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record.
  • Michael, Fleischer; Mandarino, Joseph A. (1991). Glossary of Mineral Species (6 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record Inc.
  • Michael, Fleischer; Mandarino, Joseph A. (1995). Glossary of Mineral Species (7 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record Inc.
  • Mandarino, Joseph A. (1999). Fleischer's Glossary of Mineral Species (8 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record Inc.
  • Back, Malcolm E.; Mandarino, Joseph A. (2004). Fleischer's Glossary of Mineral Species (9 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record Inc. Note: no mineral groups section in this edition.
  • Back, Malcolm E.; Mandarino, Joseph A. (2008). Fleischer's Glossary of Mineral Species (10 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record Inc.
  • Back, Malcolm E. (2014). Fleischer's Glossary of Mineral Species (11 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record Inc.
  • Back, Malcolm E. (2018). Fleischer's Glossary of Mineral Species (12 ed.). Tucson AZ: Mineralogical Record Inc.

Strunz Mineralogical Tables

  • Strunz, Hugo (1941). Mineralogische Tabellen (in German) (1 ed.). Leipzig: Akad. Verlagsges.
  • Strunz, Hugo (1949). Mineralogische Tabellen (in German) (2 ed.). Leipzig:
    Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Geest u. Portig
    .
  • Strunz, Hugo (1957). Mineralogische Tabellen (in German) (3 ed.). Leipzig:
    Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Geest u. Portig
    .
  • Strunz, Hugo (1966). Mineralogische Tabellen (in German) (4 ed.). Leipzig:
    Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Geest u. Portig
    .
  • Strunz, Hugo; Tennyson, Christel (1970). Mineralogische Tabellen (in German) (5 ed.). Leipzig:
    Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Geest u. Portig
    .
    • Strunz, Hugo; Tennyson, Christel (1977). Mineralogische Tabellen (in German) (6 ed.). Leipzig:
      Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Geest u. Portig
      .
      Note: corrected edition.
    • Strunz, Hugo; Tennyson, Christel (1978). Mineralogische Tabellen (in German) (7 ed.). Leipzig:
      Akad. Verlagsges.
      Note: reprint.
  • Strunz, Hugo (1982). Mineralogische Tabellen (in German) (8 ed.). Leipzig:
    Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Geest u. Portig
    .
  • Strunz, Hugo; Nickel, Ernest H. (2001). Strunz Mineralogical Tables (9 ed.). Stuttgart: Schweizerbart. .

Rock-Forming Minerals series

Carl Friedrich Rammelsberg series

Carl Hintze

Handbook for chemists and physicists (D'Ans Lax)

Max H. Hey

See also

References

  1. ^
    S2CID 27460479
    .
  2. ^ A Sample Analysis of British Middle and Late Bronze Age Material, using Optical Spectrometry. pp. 193–197.
  3. ^ Albert Huntington Chester (1896) A Dictionary of the Names of Minerals: Including their History and Etymology; reprinted by Classic Reprint Series, Forgotten Books, 2015
  4. ^ Mineralienatlas – Stibnit
  5. ^ Googlebooks – Theophrastus On Stones
  6. PMID 23297212
    .
  7. ^ Mineralienatlas – Calcite
  8. ^ Mineralienatlas – Beryl
  9. ^ Ruslan I. Kostov (2008). "Orphic Lithica as a Source of Late Antiquity Mineralogical Knowledge". Geology and Geophysics. 51.
  10. ^ a b c d Peridot from St. John's / Zabargad Island
  11. ^ Verzeichnis der im deutschen Sprachraum erschienenen Drucke des 17. Jahrhunderts
  12. ^ Mindat.org – Valentinite
  13. ^ Verzeichnis der im deutschen Sprachraum erschienenen Drucke des 17. Jahrhunderts
  14. ^ Gesner, Conrad (1565). De omni rerum fossilium genere, gemmis, lapidibus, metallis, et huiusmodi, libri aliquot, plerique nunc primum editi (PDF).
  15. ^ Découverte de la «Pierre de Bologne» ou "Lapis Solaris" ou encore « Litheophosphorus » (1602)
  16. ^ Elias Altschul: Real Lexicon für Homöopathische Arzneimittellehre, Therapie u. Arznei-Bereitungskunde (S. 225, 226)
  17. ^ archive.org – Full text of Notes and Queries (1874)
  18. ^ Pyromorphit
  19. ^ Mineralienatlas
  20. ^ Mindat
  21. ^ Avogadro, Amedeo (1811). "Essai d'une maniere de determiner les masses relatives des molecules elementaires des corps, et les proportions selon lesquelles elles entrent dans ces combinaisons". Journal de Physique. 73: 58–76. English translation.
  22. ^ Menzerite-(Y)
  23. ^ Roebling Award
  24. ^ Roebling mineral collection
  25. ^ Aspects of the history of the International Union of Crystallography
  26. S2CID 27325078
    .
  27. .
  28. ^ Mark C. Bandy and Jean A. Bandy (1955) De Natura Fossilium, Geological Society of America Special Publications Nr. 63
  29. ^ International Mineralogical Association (IMA)
  30. ^ "International Zeolite Association". Retrieved 16 October 2013.
  31. ^ Mindat's 15th Birthday and a present for everyone
  32. ^ Coombs, Douglas S.; Alberti, Alberto; Armbruster, Thomas; Artioli, Gilberto; Colella, Carmine; Galli, Ermanno; Grice, Joel D.; Liebau, Friedrich; Mandarino, Joseph A.; Minato, Hideo; Nickel, Ernest H.; Passaglia, Elio; Peacor, Donald R.; Quartieri, Simona; Rinaldi, Romano; Ross, Malcolm; Sheppard, Richard A.; Tillmanns, Ekkehart; Vezzalini, Giovanna (1997). "Recommended Nomenclature for Zeolite Minerals: Report of the Subcommittee on Zeolites of the International Mineralogical Association, Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names". The Canadian Mineralogist. 35: 1571–1606.
  33. ^ Mineralienatlas
  34. ^ Leake, Bernard E. (November 1978). "Nomenclature of amphiboles". The Canadian Mineralogist. 16: 501–520.
  35. ^ Bernard E. Leake; Alan R. Woolley; Charles E. S. Arps; William D. Birch; M. Charles Gilbert; Joel D. Grice; Frank C. Hawthorne; Akira Kato; Hanan J. Kisch; Vladimir G. Krivovichev; Kees Linthout; Jo Laird; Joseph A. Mandarino; Walter V. Maresch; Ernest H. Nickel; Nicholas M. S. Rock; John C. Schumacher; David C. Smith; Nick C. N. Stephenson; Luciano Ungaretti; Eric J. W. Whittaker & Guo Youzhi (February 1997). "Nomenclature of amphiboles: Report of the subcommittee on amphiboles of the International Mineralogical Association, commission on new minerals and mineral names". The Canadian Mineralogist. 35: 219–246.
  36. ^ Bernard E. Leake; Alan R. Woolley; William D. Birch; Ernst A.J. Burke; Giovanni Ferraris; Joel D. Grice; Frank C. Hawthorne; Hanan J. Kisch; Vladimir G. Krivovichev; John C. Schumacher; Nicholas C.N. Stephenson & Eric J.W. Whittaker (2004). "Nomenclature of amphiboles: additions and revisions to the International Mineralogical Association's amphibole nomenclature". American Mineralogist. 89 (5–6): 883–887.
  37. .
  38. .
  39. ^ .
  40. ^ Downs, Robert T. (2006) The RRUFF Project: an integrated study of the chemistry, crystallography, Raman and infrared spectroscopy of minerals. Program and Abstracts of the 19th General Meeting of the International Mineralogical Association in Kobe, Japan. Poster: O03-13
  41. ^ Ruff Project
  42. ^ "Minutes of the Second Business Meeting: 19th General Meeting of IMA, Kobe, Japan" (PDF). 27 July 2006. Retrieved 16 October 2013.
  43. ^ "IMA Mineral List". Retrieved 16 October 2013.
  44. S2CID 232396656. Archived from the original
    (PDF) on 22 March 2012.
  45. .
  46. ^ "IMA Master List (2009-03)". Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 June 2013. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  47. .
  48. ^ "IMA Master List (2012–11)" (PDF). CNMNC/ IMA.
  49. ^ Friis, H. (2012). "From calcite to the first natural hexaniobate or 350 years of mineral science". Acta Crystallographica Section A. Foundations of Crystallography. A68 (48).
  50. ^ Ernie Nickel; Monte Nichols (9 February 2004). Mineral Names, Redefinitions & Discreditations Passed by the CNMMN of the IMA (PDF).
  51. S2CID 201016307
    .
  52. ^ The New IMA List of Minerals (September 2012) (PDF).
  53. ^ Julian C. Gray. "Finding the Right Mineralogy Text: Dana's System of Mineralogy". The Georgia Mineral Society.
  54. S2CID 128701814
    .