This is a list of minerals named after people. The chemical composition of the mineral follows the name.
- Abelsonite: C31H32N4Ni – American physicist Philip Hauge Abelson (1913–2004)
- Abswurmbachite: Cu2+Mn3+6O8SiO4 – German mineralogist Irmgard Abs-Wurmbach (1938–2020)
- Adamite: Zn2AsO4OH – French mineralogist Gilbert Joseph Adam (1795–1881)
- Agrellite: NaCa2Si4O10F – English optical mineralogist Stuart Olof Agrell (1913–1996)
- Agricolaite: K4(UO2)(CO3)3 – German scholar Georgius Agricola (1494–1555)
- Aheylite: Fe2+Al6[(OH)4|(PO4)2]2·4H2O – American geologist Allen V. Heyl (1918–2008)
- Albrechtschraufite: Ca4Mg(UO2)2(CO3)6F2·17H2O – Albrecht Schrauf (1837–1897), professor of mineralogy, University of Vienna
- Alexandrite (variety of chrysoberyl): – Tsar Alexander II of Russia (1818–1881)
- Alforsite: Ba5Cl(PO4)3 – American geologist John T. Alfors (1930–2005)
- Allabogdanite: (Fe,Ni)2P – Alla Bogdanova, Geological Institute, Kola Science Centre of Russian Academy of Sciences
- Allanite series: sorosilicate – Scottish mineralogist, Thomas Allan (1777–1833)
- Alloriite: Na5K1.5(Al6Si6O24)(SO4)(OH)0.5 * H2O – Italian mineralogist Roberto Allori (born 1933)
- Almeidaite: crichtonite group (metal titanates); Brazilian geologist Fernando Flávio Marques de Almeida (1916–2013)
- Andersonite: Na2Ca(UO2)(CO3)3·6H2O – Charles Alfred Anderson (1902–1990), United States Geological Survey
- Andradite: Ca3Fe2Si3O12 – Brazilian statesman, naturalist, professor and poet José Bonifácio de Andrade e Silva (1763–1838)
- Ankerite: CaFe2+(CO3)2 – Austrian mineralogist Matthias Joseph Anker (1771–1843)
- Anthonyite: Cu(OH)2·3H2O – John Williams Anthony (1920–1992), professor of mineralogy, University of Arizona
- Argandite: Mn7(VO4)2(OH)8 – Swiss geologist Émile Argand (1879–1940)
- Arfvedsonite: Na3(Fe,Mg)4FeSi8O22(OH)2 – Swedish chemist Johan August Arfwedson (1792–1841)
- Armalcolite: (Mg,Fe2+)Ti2O5 – American astronauts ARM Neil Armstrong, AL Buzz Aldrin and COL Michael Collins
- Armbrusterite: K5Na3Mn3+Mn2+14[Si9O22]4(OH)10·4H2O – Swiss crystallographer Thomas Armbruster (born 1950), University of Bern
- Armstrongite: CaZr[Si6O15]·3H2O – American astronaut Neil Armstrong (1930–2012)
- Arthurite: CuFe23+[(OH,O)|(AsO4,PO4,SO4)]2·4H2O – British mineralogists Arthur Edward Ian Montagu Russell and Arthur W. G. Kingsbury
- Atencioite: Ca
2Fe2+
3Mg
2Be
4(PO
4)
6(OH)
4·6H
2O – Daniel Atencio, professor of mineralogy, Geoscience Institute, University of São Paulo
- Avicennite: Tl2O3 – Persian scholar and physician Avicenna (980–1037)
- Backite (IMA2013-113)
- Bandylite (6.AC.35)
- Baumhauerite: Pb3As4S9 – German mineralogist Heinrich Adolph Baumhauer (1848–1926)
- Bazzite: Be3(Sc,Fe)2Si6O18 – Italian engineer Alessandro E. Bazzi
- Benstonite: Ba6Ca6Mg(CO3)13 – Orlando J. Benston (1901–1966), an ore dressing metallurgist with the University of Illinois
- Bentorite: Ca6(Cr,Al)2(SO4)3(OH)12·26H2 – Israeli geologist Yaakov Ben-Tor (1910–2002)
- Berthierite: (Fe,Sb)2S4 – French geologist and mining engineer Pierre Berthier (1782–1861)
- Bertrandite: Be4Si2O7(OH)2 – French mineralogist Emile Bertrand (1844–1909)[1]
- Berzelianite: Cu2Se – Swedish chemist Jöns Jakob Berzelius (1779–1848)
- Berzeliite: NaCa2Mg2(AsO4)3 and manganberzeliite – Swedish chemist Jöns Jacob Berzelius (1779–1848)
- Bettertonite: [Al6(AsO4)3(OH)9(H2O)5]・11H2O – John Betterton (b. 1959, London), museum geologist and mineralogist at Haslemere Educational Museum in Surrey, England
- Beudantite: PbFe3+3(AsO4)(SO4)(OH)6 – François Sulpice Beudant (1787–1850) French mineralogist, University of Paris, Paris
- Bezsmertnovite: Au4Cu(Te,Pb) – Russian mineralogists Vladimir (1912–2002) and Marianna Bezsmertnaya (1915–1991).
- Bideauxite (3.DB.25)
- Bilibinskite: Au2Cu2PbTe2+ – Soviet geologist Yuri A. Bilibin (1901–1952)
- Biringuccite: Na2B5O8(OH) · 2 H2O – Vannoccio Biringuccio (1480–1538/9), Italian alchemist, metallurgist
- Bixbite: Be3(AlMn)2Si6O18 – American mineralogist Maynard Bixby; deprecated to red beryl to avoid confusion with bixbyite
- Bixbyite: (Fe,Mn)2O3 – American mineralogist Maynard Bixby
- Blödite: Na2Mg(SO4)2 · 4 H2O – German chemist Carl August Blöde (1773–1820)
- Blossite: αCu2V2O7 – mineralogist Donald F. Bloss, Virginia Polytechnic Institute
- Bobdownsite (discredited)
- Bobfergusonite: Na2Mn2+5Fe3+Al(PO4)6 – Robert Bury Ferguson, University of Manitoba
- Boehmite: γ-AlO(OH) – Bohemian-German chemist Johann Böhm (1895–1952)
- Bornite: Cu5FeS4 – Austrian mineralogist Ignaz von Born (1742–1791)
- Bonazziite: As4S4 – Paola Bonazzi, Italian professor of mineralogy and crystallography at the University of Florence (1960-2024)
- Bournonite: PbCuSbS3 – French crystallographer and mineralogist Jacques Louis de Bournon (1751–1825)[2]
- Braggite: PtS – the first mineral characterized by X-ray analysis. William Henry Bragg (1862–1942) and his son, William Lawrence Bragg (1890–1971)
- Brandtite: Ca2Mn2+(AsO4)2 · 2 H2O – Swedish chemist Georg Brandt (1694–1768)
- Breithauptite: NiSb – Saxon mineralogist Johann Friedrich August Breithaupt (1791–1873)
- Brewsterite series (9.GE.20)
- Briartite: Cu2(Zn,Fe)GeS4 – Belgian geologist Gaston Briart
- Brookite: TiO2 – English mineralogist Henry James Brooke (1771–1857)
- Brucite: Mg(OH)2 – American mineralogist Archibald Bruce (1777–1818)
- Buddingtonite: NH4AlSi3O8 – American Petrologist Arthur Francis Buddington (1890–1980)
- Burnsite: KCdCu2+7(SeO3)2O2Cl9 – Peter Carman Burns (born 1966), University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana
Thompson ISI top ten most highly cited geoscientists (1996–2007)
- Burtite: CaSn(OH)6 – American mining geologist Donald McLain Burt (born 1943)
- Buseckite: (Fe,Zn,Mn)S – American geologist Peter R. Buseck, Arizona State University
- Cabriite: Pd2SnCu – Canadian mineralogist Louis J. Cabri (born 1934)
- Cámaraite: sorosilicate – Fernando Cámara (born 1967), mineralogist of Melilla, Spain
- Cancrinite: Na6Ca2[(CO3)2 – Georg von Cancrin (1774–1845)
- Canfieldite: Ag8SnS6 – American mining engineer Frederick Alexander Canfield (1849–1926)
- Cannonite: Bi2(OH)2SO4 – American mineralogist and electron microprobe analyst Benjamin Bartlett (Bart) Cannon
- Carlfriesite: CaTe4+2Te6+O8 – American researcher at the Institute of Geology of the National university of Mexico Carl Fries, Jr.
- Carlhintzeite: Ca2AlF7 · H2O – German mineralogist Carl Hintze (1851–1916), University of Breslau
- Carlosruizite: K6(Na,K)4Na6Mg10(SeO4)12(IO3)12 · 12 H2O – Chilean geologist Carlos Ruiz Fuller (1916–1997), founder of the Chilean Geological Survey
- Carnallite: KMgCl3 · 6 H2O – Prussian mining engineer, Rudolf von Carnall (1804–1874)
- Carnotite: K2(UO2)2(VO4)2 – French mining engineer and chemist Marie Adolphe Carnot (1839–1920)
- Cassidyite: Ca2Ni0.75Mg0.25(PO4)2 · 2 H2O – American geologist William A. Cassidy[3]
- Castaingite (discredited 1967: a mixture of cuprian molybdenite and gerhardtite)
- Caswellsilverite: NaCrS2 – American geologist, entrepreneur, and oilman Caswell Silver (1916–1988)
- Cattiite: Mg3(PO4)2 · 22H2O – Michele Catti (b. 1945), Professor of Physical Chemistry, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy
- Celsian: BaAl2Si2O8 – Swedish astronomer and naturalist Anders Celsius (1701–1744)
- Cernyite: Cu2CdSnS4 – Canadian mineralogist Petr Cerny
- Cesbronite: Cu6(TeO3)2(OH)6 · 2 H2O – French mineralogist Fabian Cesbron
- Chrisstanleyite: Ag2Pd3Se4 – British mineralogist Christopher John Stanley
- Clarkeite: Na[(UO
2)O(OH)](H
2O)
0–1 – American mineral chemist and former chief chemist of the United States Geological Survey Frank Wigglesworth Clarke (1847–1931)
- Cleveite (uraninite var.): UO2 · UO3 · PO · ThO2 – Swedish chemist Per Teodor Cleve (1840–1905)
- Clintonite: Ca(Mg,Al)3(Al3Si)O10(OH)2 – American statesman De Witt Clinton (1769–1828)
- Coesite (form of SiO2): – American chemist Loring Coes, Jr. (1915–1978)
- Coffinite: U(SiO4)1−x(OH)4x – American geologist Reuben Clare Coffin
- Cohenite: (Fe,Ni,Co)
3C – German mineralogist and petrographer Emil Cohen (1842–1905)
- Colemanite: Ca2B6O11 · 5 H2O – mine owner William T. Coleman (1824–1893)
- Collinsite: Ca2Mg(PO4)2 · 2 H2O – William Henry Collins (1878–1937), director of the Geological Survey of Canada
- Columbite: Fe2+
Nb
2O
6 – Genoese explorer Christopher Columbus (c. 1451–1506)
- And manganocolumbite, ferrocolumbite, and Yttrocolumbite
- Cooperite: (Pt,Pd,Ni)S – South African metallurgist Richard A. Cooper (1890–1972)
- Cordierite: (Mg,Fe)2Al4Si5O18 to (Fe,Mg)2Al4Si5O18 – French geologist Louis Cordier (1777–1861)
- Covellite: CuS – Italian mineralogist Niccolo Covelli (1790–1829)
- Criddleite (2.LA.25)
- Cronstedtite: (Fe2+,Fe3+)3(Si,Fe3+)2O5(OH)4 – Swedish mineralogist Axel Fredrik Cronstedt (1722–1765)
- Crookesite: Cu
7(Tl,Ag)Se
4 – English chemist and physicist Sir William Crookes (1832–1919)
- Cuprosklodowskite: Cu(UO2)2(HSiO4)2·6(H2O) – Polish and naturalised-French physicist and chemist Marie Curie (1867–1934)
- Daliranite: PbHgAs2S6 – Farahnaz Daliran, University of Karlsruhe, Germany
- Dalyite: K2ZrSi6O15 – Reginald Aldworth Daly (1871–1957), Harvard University
- Danalite: Be3Fe2+4(SiO4)3S – American geologist, mineralogist and zoologist James Dwight Dana (1813–1895)
- Davinciite: Na12K3Ca6Fe2+3Zr3 – Italian polymath Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519 )
- Davyne (9.FB.05)
- Dawsonite: NaAlCO3(OH)2 – Canadian geologist Sir John William Dawson (1820–1899)
- Deanesmithite: Hg+2Hg2+3Cr6+O5S2 – Deane K. Smith (1930–2001), professor of geosciences, Penn State University
- Deerite: Fe2+6Fe3+3(Si6O17)O3(OH)5 – William Alexander Deer (1910–2009), mineralogist-petrologist, Cambridge University, Cambridge
- Delafossite: CuFeO2 – French mineralogist Gabriel Delafosse (1796–1878)
- Dellaite: Ca6(Si2O7)(SiO4)(OH)2 – geochemist, Della M. Roy (1926–2021)
- Delrioite: SrCaV5+
2O
6(OH)
2 · 3 H2O – Spanish–Mexican scientist and naturalist Andrés Manuel del Río (1764–1849)
- Demesmaekerite: Pb2Cu5(UO2)2(SeO3)6(OH)6·2H2O – Belgian geologist Gaston Demesmaeker (1911–1997)
- Descloizite: PbZnVO4(OH) – Alfred Lewis Oliver Legrand Des Cloizeaux (1817–1897), professor of mineralogy, University of Paris, Paris
- Dessauite-(Y) (Sr,Pb)(Y,U)(Ti,Fe3+
)
20O
38 – Italian mineralogist Gabor Dessau (1907–1983)
- Devilline: CaCu4(SO4)2(OH)6·3H2O – French chemist Henri Etienne Sainte-Claire Deville (1818–1881)
- Dickite: Al2Si2O5(OH)4 – Scottish metallurgical chemist Allan Brugh Dick (1833–1926)
- Djerfisherite: K
6CuFe
24S
26Cl or K
6Na(Fe,Cu)
24S
26Cl – American mineralogist Daniel Jerome Fisher (1896–1988), professor at the University of Chicago
- Dollaseite-(Ce): CaCeMg2AlSi3O11F(OH) – American geologist Wayne A. Dollase (born 1938), geology professor at UCLA
- Dolomite: CaMg(CO3)2 – French naturalist and geologist Déodat Gratet de Dolomieu (1750–1801)
- Domeykite: Cu3As – Polish geologist, mineralogist and educator Ignacy Domeyko (1802–1889)
- Donnayite: NaCaSr3Y(CO3)6 · 3 H2O – Canadian professors J. D. H. Donnay and G. Donnay
- Dumortierite: Al6.5–7BO3(SiO4)3(O,OH)3 – French paleontologist Eugene Dumortier (1803–1873)
- Davemaoite: Cubic CaSiO3– Mineral physicist Ho-kwang Mao
- Erikapohlite (IMA2010-090) – German collector of minerals Erika Pohl-Ströher (1919–2016)
- Ernienickelite: NiMn3O7·3H2O – Canadian-Australian mineralogist Ernest (Ernie) H. Nickel (1925–2009)
- Ernstburkeite: Mg(CH3SO3)2·12H2O – mineralogist Ernst A. J. Burke, former Head of the CNMNC (IMA)
- Eskolaite: Cr2O3 – Finnish geologist Pentti Eelis Eskola (1883–1964)
- Esperite: PbCa3Zn4(SiO4)4 – American petrologist Esper S. Larsen Jr. (1879–1961), Harvard University (Originally called calcium larsenite)
- Evansite: Al3(PO4)(OH)6·6H2O – British nickel refiner, weapons manufacturer and geologist Brooke Evans (1797–1862)
- Gadolinite: (Ce,La,Nd,Y)2FeBe2Si2O10 – Finnish mineralogist and chemist Johan Gadolin (1760–1852)
- Gagarinite series: Na(REExCa(1-x))(REEyCa(1-y))F6 – Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin (1934–1968)
- Gahnite: ZnAl2O4 – Swedish chemist Johan Gottlieb Gahn (1745–1818)
- Gatehouseite: Mn2+5(PO4)2(OH)4 – crystal chemist Bryan M. K. C. Gatehouse (born 1932), Monash University, Melbourne
- Genkinite: (Pt,Pd)4Sb3 – Soviet mineralogist A. D. Genkin
- Georgerobinsonite: Pb4(CrO4)2(OH)2FCl – George Willard Robinson
- Gerhardtite: Cu2(NO3)(OH)3 – Alsatian chemist Charles Frédéric Gerhardt
- Gibbsite: Al(OH)3 – American mineralogist George Gibbs (1777–1834)
- Uintaite (syn. gilsonite, asphalt) – American Samuel H. Gilson
- Ferri-ghoseite: ☐[Mn2+
Na][Mg
4Fe3+
]Si
8O
22(OH)
2 – Subrata Ghose (born 1932), emeritus professor at the University of Washington, Seattle
- Goethite: FeOOH – German polymath Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832)
- Julgoldite: sorosilicate – American mineralogist and geochemist Julian Royce Goldsmith (1918–1999)
- Gormanite: Fe2+3Al4(PO4)4(OH)6·2H2O – mineralogist Donald Herbert Gorman, University of Toronto
- Gregoryite: (Na2,K2,Ca)CO3 – British geologist and author John Walter Gregory (1864–1932)[5][6]
- Greigite: Fe2+Fe3+2S4 – mineralogist and physical chemist Joseph W. Greig (1895–1977)[6][7]
- Grossite: CaAl4O7 – Israeli mineralogist and geologist Shulamit Gross (1923–2012)
- Grothite (titanite var., 9.AG.15)
- Grunerite: Fe7Si8O22(OH)2 – Swiss-French chemist Emmanuel-Louis Gruner (1809–1883)
- Guettardite: Pb(Sb,As)2S4 – French naturalist Jean-Étienne Guettard (1715–1786)[8]
- Guilleminite: Ba(UO2)3(SeO3)2(OH)4·3H2O – French chemist and mineralogist Jean Claude Guillemin (1923–1994)
- Gunterite: Na4(H2O)16(H2V10O28) · 6 H2O – American mineralogist Mickey Gunter (born 1953)
- Gunningite: (Zn,Mn2+)SO4·H2O – Canadian geologist and academic Henry C. Gunning (1901–1991)[9]
- Haggertyite: Ba(Fe2+6Ti5Mg)O19 – American geophysicist Stephen E. Haggerty (born 1938)
- Haidingerite: Ca(AsO3OH) · H2O – Austrian mineralogist Wilhelm Karl Ritter von Haidinger (1795–1871)
- Halloysite: Al2Si2O5(OH)4 – Belgian geologist Omalius d'Halloy
- Hambergite: Be2BO3OH – Swedish mineralogist Axel Hamberg (1863–1933)
- Hanksite: Na22K(SO4)9(CO3)2Cl – Henry Garber Hanks (1826–1907), first state mineralogist of California
- Hapkeite: Fe2Si – American planetary scientist Bruce Hapke
- Hausmannite: Mn2+Mn3+2O4 – Friedrich Ludwig Hausmann (1782–1859), professor of mineralogy, University of Göttingen, Göttingen
- Hawleyite: CdS – Canadian mineralogist James Edwin Hawley (1897–1965)
- Hazenite: KNaMg
2(PO
4)
2 · 14 H2O – Robert M. Hazen of the Carnegie Institute
- Håleniusite-(La): (La,Ce)OF – Ulf Hålenius, director of the mineralogy department at the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm, Sweden
- Hauyne: Na3Ca(Si3Al3)O12(SO4) – French mineralogist René Just Haüy (1743–1822)
- Heinrichite: Ba(UO2)2(AsO4)2 · 10–12 H2O – mineralogist Eberhardt William Heinrich (1918–1991)
- Hendricksite: KZn3(Si3Al)O10(OH)2 – American agriculturist Sterling B. Hendricks (1902–1981)
- Herbertsmithite: ZnCu3(OH)6Cl2 – British mineralogist Herbert Smith (1872–1953)
- Hessite: Ag2Te – Swiss-born Russian chemist Germain Henri Hess (1802–1850)
- Heyite (identical with calderonite, 8.BG.05)
- Heulandite series: (Ca,Na)2–3Al3(Al,Si)2Si13O36 · 12 H2O – English mineral collector Henry Heuland (1778–1856)
- Hiddenite (green variety of spodumene): – American geologist William Earl Hidden (1853–1918)
- Högbomite (renamed to magnesiohögbomite-2N2S): (Al,Mg,Fe,Ti)22(O,OH)32 – Swedish geologist Arvid Högbom (1857–1940)
- And ferrohögbomite-2N2S, magnesiohögbomite series and zincohögbomite series
- Holmquistite: (Li2)(Mg3Al2)(Si8O22)(OH)2 – Swedish petrologist Per Johan Holmquist (1866–1946)
- Holtite: (Ta0.6◻0.4)Al6BSi3O18(O,OH)2.25 – Harold Holt (1908–1967), prime minister of Australia
- Hopeite: Zn3(PO4)2·4H2O – Scottish chemist Thomas Charles Hope (1766–1844)
- Howieite: inosilicate with 4-periodic single chain – Robert Andrew Howie (1923–2012), British petrologist and mineralogist of King's College, London University, London
- Howlite: Ca2B5SiO9(OH)5 – Canadian chemist, mineralogist Henry How (1828–1879)
- Hübnerite: MnWO4 – German mineralogist Adolf Huebner
- Hurlbutite (8.AA.15)
- Hutchinsonite: (Tl,Pb)2As5S9 – Cambridge mineralogist Arthur Hutchinson (1866–1937)
- Huttonite: ThSiO4 – New Zealand-American mineralogist Colin Osborne Hutton (1910–1971)
- Karenwebberite: Na(Fe2+,Mn2+)PO4 – American geologist Karen L. Webber
- Kassite: CaTi2O4(OH)2 – Russian geologist Nikolai Grigorievich Kassin (1885–1949)
- Kampfite: Ba12(Si11Al5)O31(CO3)8Cl5 – Anthony Robert Kampf (born 1948)
- Keilite: (Fe,Mg)S – American mineralogist Klaus Keil (1934–2022)
- Khomyakovite: Na12Ca6Sr3Fe3WZr3(Si25O73)(O,OH,H2O)3(Cl,OH)2 – Russian mineralogist Alexander Khomyakov (1933–2012)
- Kieserite: MgSO4 · H2O – Dietrich Georg von Kieser (1779–1862), former president, Jena Academy
- Kleberite: FeTi6O13 · 4 H2O – German professor Will Kleber (1906–1970)
- Kobellite: Pb22Cu4(Bi,Sb)30S69 – German mineralogist Wolfgang Franz von Kobell (1803–1882)
- Kochsandorite: CaAl2(CO3)2(OH)4H2O – Hungarian mineralogist Sándor Koch (1896–1983)
- Kogarkoite: Na3(SO4)F – Russian scientist Lia Nikolaevna Kogarko
- Kolbeckite: ScPO4 · 2 H2O – German mineralogist Friedrich L. W. Kolbeck
- Kosnarite: Zr2(PO4)3 – after Richard Andrew "Rich" Kosnar (1946–2007), American mineral collector
- Kostovite: AuCuTe4 – Bulgarian mineralogist Ivan Kostov (1913–2004)
- Krennerite: AuTe2 varying to (Au0.8,Ag0.2)Te2 – Hungarian mineralogist Joseph Krenner (1839–1920)
- Krotite: CaAl2O4 – Russian-American cosmochemist Alexander N. Krot
- Kruťaite: CuSe2 Czech mineralogist Tomas Krut'a (1906–1998)
- Kukharenkoite-(Ce): Ba3CeF(CO3)3 – Russian mineralogist Alexander A. Kukharenko (1914–1993)
- Kurnakovite: MgB3O3(OH)5 · 5 H2O – Russian mineralogist and chemist Nikolai Semenovich Kurnakov (1860–1941)
- Kunzite (variety of spodumene): – American mineralogist George Frederick Kunz (1856–1932)
- Lacroixite: NaAl(PO4)F – French mineralogist Antoine François Alfred Lacroix (1863–1948)
- Langite: Cu4(SO4)(OH)6·2H2O – Austrian chemist Viktor von Lang (1838–1921)
- Laueite (8.DC.30)
- Lavinskyite: K(Li,Cu,Mg,Na)2Cu6(Si4O11)2(OH)4 – photographer of minerals Robert Lavinsky (Commons:Robert Lavinsky)
- Lavoisierite: Mn2+8[Al10(Mn3+Mg)][Si11P]O44(OH)12 – French chemist Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier (1743–1794)
- Leakeite root name, sodium amphibole subgroup – British geologist Bernard E. Leake (born 1932), University of Glasgow
- Minerals: ferri-fluoro-leakeite, ferri-leakeite, fluoro-leakeite, potassic-ferri-leakeite, potassic-leakeite, potassic-mangani-leakeite
- Legrandite: Zn2(AsO4)(OH)·(H2O) – Belgian mining engineer Louis C.A. Legrand (1861–1920)
- Lemanskiite: NaCaCu5(AsO4)4Cl·5H2O – Chester S. Lemanski, Jr. (b. 1947), American mineral collector
- Liebauite: Ca3Cu5Si9O26 – German Friedrich Liebau (1926–2011), professor of mineralogy, University of Kiel
- Linnaeite: Co+2Co+32S4 – Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778)
- Lipscombite: (Fe2+,Mn2+)(Fe3+)2(PO4)2(OH) – American chemist William Lipscomb (1919–2011)
- Livingstonite: HgSb4S8 – Scottish explorer in Africa David Livingstone (1813–1873)
- Lonsdaleite: C – British crystallographer Kathleen Lonsdale (1903–1971)
- Lorandite: TlAsS2 – Hungarian physicist Loránd Eötvös (1848–1919)
- Lotharmeyerite: CaZn
2(AsO
4)
2·2H
2O – German chemist Julius Lothar Meyer (1830–1895)
- And cobaltlotharmeyerite, ferrilotharmeyerite, manganlotharmeyerite, nickellotharmeyerite
- Lucabindiite: (K,NH4)As4O6(Cl,Br) – Luca Bindi, professor of mineralogy and former head of the Division of Mineralogy of the Natural History Museum of the University of Florence (b. 1971)
- Lukechangite-(Ce): Na3Ce2(CO3)4F – American mineralogist Luke L. Y. Chang (1934–2009)[13]
- Macdonaldite: BaCa4Si16O36(OH)2 · 10 H2O – American volcanologist, Gordon Andrew Macdonald (1911–1978, redirect)
- Malhmoodite: FeZr(PO4)2 · 4H2O – Bertha K. Malhmood, for many years Administrative Assistant of the Branch of Analytical Laboratories, U.S. Geological Survey
- Mandarinoite: Fe2(SeO3)3 · 4H2O – American-Canadian mineralogist Joseph (Joe) A. Mandarino (1929–2007)
- Maricite: NaFePO4 – Croatian mineralogist Luka Marić (1899–1979), University of Zagreb
- Machatschkiite (8.CJ.35)
- Mascagnite: (NH4)2SO4 – Italian anatomist Paolo Mascagni (1752–1815)
- Mathesiusite: K5(UO2)4(SO4)4(VO5) · 4(H2O) – German minister Johannes Mathesius (1504–1565)
- Mckelveyite-(Y): Ba3NaCa0.75U0.25Y(CO3)6 · 3 H2O – American geologist Vincent E. McKelvey (1916–1985)
- Meyerhofferite: CaB3O3(OH)5 · H2O – German chemist, Wilhelm Meyerhoffer (1864–1906)
- Meyrowitzite: Ca(UO2)(CO3)2 · 5H2O – after Robert Meyrowitz (1916–2013), an American analytical chemist
- Mendeleevite-(Ce): Cs6(Ce22Ca6)(Si70O175)(OH,F)14(H2O)21 – Russian chemist Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev (1834–1907)
- Menzerite-(Y) (IMA2009-050)
- Millerite: NiS – British mineralogist William Hallowes Miller (1801–1880)
- Millosevichite: Al2(SO4)3 – Italian mineralogist Federico Millosevich (1875–1942)
- Moëloite (2.HC.25)
- Mohsite (crichtonite var., 4.CC.40)
- Moissanite: SiC (naturally occurring) – discoverer Henri Moissan (1852–1907)
- Monticellite: Ca(Mg,Fe)SiO4 – Italian mineralogist Teodoro Monticelli (1759–1845)
- Morganite (variety of Beryl): – American financier J. P. Morgan (1837–1913)
- Mozartite: CaMn3+SiO4(OH) – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)
- Murdochite: PbCu6O8−x(Cl,Br)2x – American mineralogist Joseph Murdoch (1890–1973)
- Nataliakulikite: Ca4Ti2(Fe3+,Fe2+)(Si,Fe3+,Al)O11 – Russian mineralogist Natalia Artyemovna Kulik (born 1933)
- Nasonite: Pb6Ca4(Si2O7)3Cl2 – American mining engineer and author Frank Lewis Nason (1856–1928)
- Norrishite: KLiMn3+2(Si4O10)O2 – Australian geologist Keith Norrish (1924–2017), pioneer of wavelength-dispersive X-ray fluorescence analysis
- Nikischerite: Fe2+6Al3(OH)18[Na(H2O)6][SO4]2·6H2O – American mineralogist Anthony J. Nikischer (born 1949)
- Niningerite: MgS – American meteoriticist Harvey Harlow Nininger (1887–1986)
- Obertiite amphibole root name (9.DE.25)
- Okenite: CaSi2O5·2H2O – German naturalist Lorenz Oken (1779–1851)
- Saleeite: Mg(UO2)2(PO4)2·10H2O – Belgian mineralogist Achille Salée (1883–1932)
- Samarskite: Y0.2REE0.3Fe3+0.3U0.2Nb0.8Ta0.2O4 – Russian official Vasili Samarsky-Bykhovets (1803–1870)
- Sanbornite: BaSi2O5 – American mineralogist Frank B. Sanborn (1862–1936)
- Satterlyite: (Fe++,Mg)2(PO4)(OH) – Canadian geologist Jack Satterly (born 1906)
- Scheelite: CaWO4 – German-Swedish pharmaceutical chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1742–1786)
- Shcherbinaite: VO5 – Soviet geologist Vladimir Shcherbina (1907–1978)
- Scheuchzerite (9.DM.35)
- Schoenfliesite (4.FC.10)
- Schoepite: (UO2)8O(OH)12·12H2O – Alfred Schoep (1881–1966), professor of mineralogy at the University of Ghent
- Schreibersite: (Fe,Ni)3P – Austrian naturalist Carl Franz Anton Ritter von Schreibers (1775–1852)
- Schreyerite: V2Ti3O9 – German mineralogist Werner Schreyer (1930–2006)
- Schröckingerite: NaCa3(UO2) – Julius Freiherr Schröckinger von Neudenberg (1814–1882)
- Scottyite: BaCu2Si2O7 – Michael Scott (born 1945), first CEO of Apple and significant sponsor of the Rruff project
- Seamanite: Mn3[B(OH)4](PO4)(OH)2 – Arthur Edmund Seaman (1858–1937)
- Segnitite: PbFe3H(AsO4)2(OH)6 – after Australian mineralogist, gemologist and petrologist Edgar Ralph Segnit (1923–1999)
- Sekaninaite: (Fe+2,Mg)2Al4Si5O18 – Czech mineralogist Josef Sekanina (born 1901)
- Sellaite: MgF2 – Italian politician and mineralogist Quintino Sella (1827–1884)
- Senarmontite: Sb2O3 – French mineralogist and physician Henri Hureau de Sénarmont (1808–1862)
- Sengierite: Cu2(OH)2[UO2|VO4]2·6H2O – Belgian UMHK director Edgar Sengier (1879–1963)[14]
- Serpierite: Ca(Cu,Zn)4(SO4)2(OH)6·3H2O – Giovanni Battista Serpieri (1832–1897)
- Shulamitite: Ca3TiFe3+AlO8 – Israeli mineralogist and geologist Shulamit Gross (1923–2012)
- Sillimanite: Al2SiO5 – American chemist Benjamin Silliman (1779–1864)
- Simpsonite: Al4(Ta,Nb)3O13(OH) – Australian mineralogist Edward Sydney Simpson (1875–1939)
- Sklodowskite: Mg(UO2)2(HSiO4)2·5H2O – Polish and naturalised-French physicist and chemist Marie Curie (1867–1934)
- Smithite: AgAsS2 – British mineralogist Herbert Smith (1872–1953)
- Smithsonite: ZnCO3 – British chemist and mineralogist, James Smithson (1754–1829)
- Sorbyite (2.LB.30)
- Sperrylite: PtAs2 – American chemist Francis Louis Sperry
- Steacyite: K0.3(Ca,Na)2ThSi8O20 – Canadian mineralogist Harold Robert Steacy (born 1923)
- Stenonite: Sr2Al(CO3)F5 – Danish physician Nicolaus Steno (Niels Steensen) (1638–1686)
- Stephanite: Ag5SbS4 – Archduke Stephan of Austria (1817–1867)
- Stichtite: Mg6Cr2CO3(OH)16·4H2O – American born Australian mine manager Robert Carl Sticht (1857–1922)
- Stilleite: ZnSe – German geologist Hans Stille (1876–1966)
- Stolzite: PbWO4 – Czechoslovakian Joseph Alexi Stolz (1803–1896)
- Strashimirite: Cu8(AsO4)4(OH)4·5H2O – Bulgarian petrographer and mineralogist Strashimir Dimitrov (1892–1960)
- Stromeyerite: AgCuS – German chemist, Friedrich Stromeyer (1776–1835)
- Strunzite: Mn2+Fe3+2(PO4)2(OH)2·6H2O – German mineralogist Karl Hugo Strunz (1910–2006)
- And ferristrunzite, ferrostrunzite
- Stumpflite: Pt(Sb,Bi) – Austrian professor of mineralogy Eugen Friedrich Stumpfl (1931–2004)
- Sugilite: KNa2(Fe,Mn,Al)2Li3Si12O30 – Japanese petrologist Ken-ichi Sugi (1901–1948)
- Svanbergite: SrAl3(PO4)(SO4)(OH)6 – Swedish chemist Lars Fredrik Svanberg (1805–1878)
- Swedenborgite: NaBe4Sb5+O7 – Swedish scientist and theologian Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772)
- Sweetite: Zn(OH)2 – Curator of mineral department of the British Museum, Jessie Sweet (1901–1979)
- Sylvite: KCl – Dutch chemist Franciscus Sylvius (1614–1672)
- Vaesite: NiS2 – Belgian mineralogist Johannes F. Vaes (1902–1978)
- Valentinite: Sb2O3 – German alchemist Basilius Valentinus (might be Johann Thölde? 1565–1614)
- Vanthoffite: Na6Mg(SO4)4 – Jacobus Henricus van't Hoff (1852–1911), professor of chemistry
- Vaterite: CaCO3 – German mineralogist Heinrich Vater (1859–1930)
- Vernadite (4.FE.40)
- Veszelyite: (Cu,Zn)2Zn(PO4)(OH)3·2H2O – Ágost Veszely (1821–1879), Hungarian mining engineer
- Vincentite: (Pd,Pt)3(As,Sb,Te) – Ewart Albert "David" Vincent (1919–2012), mineralogist at Durham College and Oxford University (UK) and chair of Geology at Manchester University (UK)
- Vivianite: Fe3(PO4)2·8H2O and metavivianite - English mineralogist John Henry Vivian (1785–1855)
- Yangite: PbMnSi3O8·H2O – Hexiong Yang, Mineralogy researcher at the Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona
W.R. Hamilton, 1974, The Hamlyn Guide to Minerals, Rocks and Fossils, London, Hamlyn
"Fuchsite". mindat.org. Hudson Institute of Mineralogy. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
"Gregoryite". mindat.org. Hudson Institute of Mineralogy. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
"Guettardite". mindat.org. Hudson Institute of Mineralogy. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
"Gunningite". mindat.org. Hudson Institute of Mineralogy. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
"Johnbaumite". mindat.org. Hudson Institute of Mineralogy. Retrieved October 10, 2020.
"Zinkenite". mindat.org. Hudson Institute of Mineralogy. Retrieved October 10, 2020.