This list includes those recognised minerals beginning with the letter I. The International Mineralogical Association is the international group that recognises new minerals and new mineral names, however minerals discovered before 1959 did not go through the official naming procedure, although some minerals published previously have been either confirmed or discredited since that date. This list contains a mixture of mineral names that have been approved since 1959 and those mineral names believed to still refer to valid mineral species (these are called "grandfathered" species). The list is divided into groups: The data was exported from mindat.org on 29 April 2005; updated up to 'IMA2018'. The minerals are sorted by name, followed by the structural group (rruff.info/ima and ima-cnmnc by mineralienatlas.de, mainly) or chemical class (mindat.org and basics), the year of publication (if it's before of an IMA approval procedure), the IMA approval and the Nickel–Strunz code. The first link is to mindat.org, the second link is to webmineral.com, and the third is to the Handbook of Mineralogy (Mineralogical Society of America).
1. I
Meteoric iron var. kamacite, with about 7% nickel. Nandan iron meteorites, Nandan County, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China; size: 2.9 × 2.4 × 1.7 cm. https://handwiki.org/wiki/index.php?curid=1399516
2. External Links
white;">IMA–CNMNC / Nickel–Strunz IDs Mineral categories (classes, subclasses, divisions)
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"Special cases" ("native elements and organic minerals") |
- "Native elements" (IDs 1)
- Organic minerals (IDs 10)
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"Sulfides and oxides" |
- Sulfides (IDs 2.A–F)
- Sulfosalts; sulfarsenites, sulfantimonites, sulfbismuthites (IDs 2.G)
- Sulfosalts; sulfarsenates, sulfantimonates (IDs 2.K)
- Other sulfosalts (IDs 2.H–J and 2.L–M)
- Oxides (IDs 4.A–E, e.g. pyrochlore supergroup and corundum group)
- Hydroxides (IDs 4.F–G)
- "Arsenites", "sulfites" and iodates (IDs 4.J–K)
- Tellurium oxysalts
- Vanadium oxides (IDs 4.H)
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"Evaporites and similars" |
- Carbonates (IDs 5.A–E)
- Nitrates (IDs 5.N)
- Borates (IDs 6)
- Halides (IDs 3)
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"Mineral structures with tetrahedral units" (sulfate anion, phosphate anion, silicon, etc.) |
- Monomeric minerals (similar to nesosilicates)
- Sulfates (IDs 7.A–E)
- Thiosulphates (IDs 7.J)
- Chromates (IDs 7.F)
- Molybdates, wolframates, niobates (IDs 7.G–H)
- Phosphates (IDs 8)
- Arsenates, vanadates (IDs 8)
- Monomeric, isolated silicates (IDs 9.A)
- Germanates (IDs 9.J)
- Silicate frameworks, tectosilicates
- Zeolite frameworks, zeolite family (IDs 9.G)
- Other zeolitic frameworks: nephelines (IDs 9.FA.05)
- Cancrinite-sodalite groups (IDs 9.FB.)
- Other tectosilicates (IDs 9.FA. and 9.FB.15, e.g. feldspars)
- Other silicate frameworks
- Cyclosilicates (IDs 9.C)
- Phyllosilicates (IDs 9.E, e.g. clays)
- Silica family (IDs 4.DA.)
- Single chain inosilicates (IDs 9.D, e.g. pyroxenes)
- Ribbon or multiple chain inosilicates (IDs 9.D, e.g. amphiboles)
- Other non monomeric minerals
- Unclassified silicates (IDs 9.H)
- Sorosilicates (IDs 9.B, e.g. epidote and seidozerite supergroups)
- Polymeric, isolated silicates (IDs 9.A, e.g. olivine and gadolinite supergroups)
- Other inorganic polymers (e.g. polyoxometalates; "polyphosphates", IDs 8.F)
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The content is sourced from: https://handwiki.org/wiki/Earth:List_of_minerals_approved_by_IMA_(I)