Mineral Checklist
Generate a collector's checklist of minerals organized by Strunz mineral class. Track your collection, set goals, and discover new minerals to add to your cabinet.
CollectionHow to Use
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1
Choose a Strunz mineral class or subclass
Select from the ten primary Strunz classes—native elements, sulfides, halides, oxides, carbonates, nitrates, borates, sulfates, phosphates, or silicates—or drill into subclasses to focus your checklist on a specific chemical group such as chain silicates or carbonate nitrates.
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2
Mark minerals you have collected
Check off each species you own, specifying whether your specimen is a massive, crystallized, or twinned example. The checklist tracks completion percentage by class and subclass, highlighting groups where your collection is strong and gaps where notable species are missing.
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3
Set collection goals and explore discovery suggestions
Review the suggested acquisition targets based on your current gaps. The tool prioritizes species by collector interest, display quality, and acquisition difficulty, flagging whether each target species is commercially available, rare, or locality-specific so you can plan future collecting trips or purchases.
About
Systematic mineral collecting—the pursuit of representative specimens from every mineral class, subclass, or family—has driven mineralogical discovery since the 18th century. James Dwight Dana’s “System of Mineralogy,” first published in 1837 and revised through the 8th edition by Charles Palache, Harry Berman, and Clifford Frondel between 1944 and 1962, formalized the chemical-structural taxonomy that modern collectors and scientists use to organize collections.
The International Mineralogical Association’s Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification serves as the global authority for species approval, evaluating proposals based on X-ray diffraction data, electron microprobe compositional analysis, and structural determination. The commission approves roughly 80–100 new species annually, drawn largely from advanced analytical studies of locality specimens and from extreme-environment samples such as fumarolic deposits and impact melt rocks. The current species count of approximately 5,900 represents a small fraction of theoretically possible mineral compositions, reflecting the thermodynamic constraints of natural mineral formation.
For collectors, a structured checklist tied to a classification system transforms accumulation into systematic documentation. Tracking collection completeness by Strunz class reveals collecting patterns and highlights chemical groups that are underrepresented. Many collectors pursue representation from all 10 classes, then refine goals to include all subclasses, regional mineralogy from specific geological provinces, or thematic groups such as fluorescent minerals, pseudomorphs, or minerals named after notable mineralogists. Organized collection documentation, cross-referenced against locality, acquisition source, and analytical verification, transforms a personal collection into a scientific resource.