The oxide mineral class includes those minerals in which the oxide anion (O2−) is bonded to one or more metal alloys. The hydroxide-bearing minerals are typically included in the oxide class. Minerals with complex anion groups such as the silicates, sulfates, carbonates and phosphates are classed separately.

Oxide mineral exhibit at the Museum of Geology in South Dakota

Simple oxides

edit

Nickel–Strunz class 4: oxides

edit

IMA-CNMNC proposes a new hierarchical scheme (Mills et al., 2009). This list uses it to modify the Nickel–Strunz classification (mindat.org, 10 ed, pending publication).[original research?]

  • Abbreviations:
    • "*": discredited (IMA/CNMNC status)
    • "?": questionable/doubtful (IMA/CNMNC status)
    • "REE": Rare-earth element (Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Pm, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu)
    • "PGE": Platinum-group element (Ru, Rh, Pd, Os, Ir, Pt)
    • 03.C Aluminofluorides, 06 Borates, 08 Vanadates (04.H V[5,6] Vanadates), 09 Silicates:
      • Neso: insular (from Greek: νησος, romanized: nēsos, lit.'island')
      • Soro: grouping (from Greek: σωροῦ, romanized: sōros; heap, mound (especially of corn))
      • Cyclo: ring
      • Ino: chain (from Greek: ις [genitive: ινος, inos], fibre)
      • Phyllo: sheet (from Greek: φύλλον, romanized: phyllon, lit.'leaf')
      • Tekto: three-dimensional framework
  • Nickel–Strunz code scheme: NN.XY.##x
    • NN: Nickel–Strunz mineral class number
    • X: Nickel–Strunz mineral division letter
    • Y: Nickel–Strunz mineral family letter
    • ##x: Nickel–Strunz mineral/group number, x add-on letter

Class: oxides

edit

Class: hydroxides

edit

References

edit