This alphabetical listing of K minerals include synonyms of accepted mineral names,
pronunciation of that name, name origins, and locality information.
LEGEND:
Valid Species (Bold); Pronunciation;
Mineral Image;
Mineral Image Gallery;
jCrystal Form;
jPOWD Form;
Calculated Radioactive Intensity
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Kamotoite-(Y) (Y,Nd,Gd)2U++++++4(CO3)3O12 Approved IMA 1986
NAME ORIGIN: Named for the locality LOCALITY: Kamoto, southern Shaba, Zaire.
Kampfite Ba12(Si11Al5)O31(CO3)8Cl5 Approved IMA 2000 (Dana # Added)
NAME ORIGIN: Named for Anthony Robert Kampf (1948-), Curator and Section Head of Minerals, Los Angeles County Museum, in recognition of his many contributions in the study of new minerals.
Kamphaugite-(Y) (Ca1.84REEx)(Y1.46REE0.54-x)(CO3)4(OH)1.65 Approved IMA 1993
NAME ORIGIN: Named for Erling Kamphaug (1931-), Norwegian mineral collector.
NAME ORIGIN: Named for the localtiy. LOCALITY: Karasug F-REE-barite-fluorite deposit, 15 km north of Karasug, western Tannu-Ola Mountains, Tuva, Siberia, Russia.
Karchevskyite [Mg18Al9(OH)54][Sr2(CO3,PO4)9(H2O,H3O)11] Approved IMA 2005 (Dana # Added)
NAME ORIGIN: Named for Pavel Karchevsky (1976-2002), Russian mineralogist who made a significant contribution to the study of carbonatites.
NAME ORIGIN: Named for Kicolai Grigorevich Kassin (1885-1949), Russian Geologist and academician, discoverer of the Afrikanda massif on the Kola Peninsula.
Kastningite (Mn++,Fe++,Mg)Al2(PO4 )2(OH)2 Approved IMA 1999 (Dana # Added)
NAME ORIGIN: Name from kermes, a name given from the Persian qurmizq, "crimson" in the older chemistry to red amorphous antimony trisulphide, often mixed with antimony trioxide.