This alphabetical listing of W 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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NAME ORIGIN: Named for the locality. LOCALITY: Wolsendorf, Bavaria, Germany.
Wonesite (Na,K).5(Mg,Fe,Al)3(Si,Al)4O10(OH,F)2 Approved IMA 1981
NAME ORIGIN: Named for petrologist David R. Wones (1932-1984), Professor of Geology, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA.
NAME ORIGIN: Named for Roy Woodall (1930-), Australian geologist.
Woodhouseite CaAl3(PO4)(SO4)(OH)6 Valid Species (Pre-IMA) 1937
NAME ORIGIN: Named for Charles D. Woodhouse (1888-1975), U.S. mineral collector
Woodruffite (Zn,Mn++)2Mn++++5O12 Valid Species (Pre-IMA) 1953
NAME ORIGIN: Named for Samuel Woodruff, late-nineteenth-century miner and mineral collector at Franklin, who collected and preserved many of the finest specimens found at that locality. LOCALITY: Sterling Hill mine, Ogdensburg, Sussex County, New Jersey, USA.
Woodwardite Cu4Al2(SO4)(OH)12 Valid Species (Pre-IMA) 1866
NAME ORIGIN: Named for Samuel P. Woodward (1821-1865), English naturalist and geologist.
Wooldridgeite Na2CaCu++2(P2O7)2 Approved IMA 1998 (Dana # Added)
NAME ORIGIN: Named after James Wooldridge (1923-1995), keen amateur mineralogist, micromounter and gemologist from Fernhill Heath, Worcestershire, U.K., who discovered the mineral.
NAME ORIGIN: For the prehistoric pueblo dwelling near the locality. LOCALITY: On the walls of a shallow open cut 8 miles ESE of Gray Mountain, Coconino County, Arizona USA.