laohoonete
Laohoonete is a hypothetical mineral name used in geology education to illustrate the process by which new minerals are named, described, and validated. It is not reported from any real locality and is not recognized by the International Mineralogical Association (IMA). The term is intended for instructional use, not as a summary of an actual mineral specimen.
Etymology and naming: The name combines a regional reference—loosely associated with Southeast Asia—with the common mineral
Proposed properties: In schematic discussions, laohoonete is described as a monoclinic silicate-phosphate mineral containing calcium and
Formation and associations: The hypothetical mineral is shown as forming in hydrothermal veins within carbonate rocks,
Significance: As a pedagogical example, laohoonete helps students understand mineral classification, field description, and the IMA
See also: Mineral nomenclature, International Mineralogical Association, silicate minerals, phosphate minerals.