About

Mission & Scope

American Mineralogist (Am Min) is the flagship journal of the Mineralogical Society of America (MSA), continuously published since 1916. Am Min is home to some of the most important advances in the Earth and Planetary Sciences with a mineralogical focus in the broadest sense. Our mission is a continuance of this heritage: to provide readers with reports on exciting, original scientific research, both fundamental and applied, with far reaching implications and far ranging appeal. Topics of interest cover all aspects of planetary evolution, and related biological and atmospheric processes. These include but are not limited to mineralogy & crystallography, high-pressure mineral physics, high- and low-temperature geochemistry, petrology, geofluids, bio-geochemistry, bio-mineralogy, synthetic materials of relevance to the Earth and planetary processes, and breakthroughs in analytical and computational methods of any of the aforementioned. Our 2023 Journal Impact Factor is 2.7.

Authors: American Mineralogist is an international journal that publishes mineralogical papers of broad interest to the geoscience and materials science community. Manuscripts whose implications are of only regional interest or those that do not have a significant, broad scientific impact on the readership will not be accepted for publication by American Mineralogist. In cover letters, authors must explain the importance of their research, and why their results would be of interest to an international audience.

Once distributed for review, manuscripts will be judged on the basis of significance, originality, breadth of appeal, and clarity of presentation. The decision regarding acceptance or rejection of a manuscript is the responsibility of the Editors and is based in large part on the recommendations of Associate Editors and reviewers. Membership in MSA is not a prerequisite for publication in Am Min.

For a different view of paper types, you can see a table here.

Types of Publications

The journal publishes scientific ArticlesLettersOutlooks in Earth and Planetary Materials, comments and replies, news items in the areas of Earth and Planetary Sciences, book reviews on the same, and memorials.

Articles represent the majority of our published manuscripts. While they have no rigid size minimum or maximum, Articles tend to have a typeset length of eight to twelve journal pages. We expect papers to be written concisely, and even elegantly, to communicate the new and essential information in the most effective way possible. If the manuscript exceeds 50 pages (text, figures, tables), authors are encouraged to consider using the (free to authors and readers) electronic depository for some portion of the work (e.g., tables, figures, methods or part of methods, etc.), if appropriate. Contact the Editors with any questions. Manuscript format requirements: 8.5 x 11 inch paper, double-spaced, 12 pt type. Click for more guidance. Remember very large papers tend to (1) take longer in peer review, (2) are harder to find reviewers for (because of the time commitment), and (3) cost more in content creation and page printing.

Letters provide a means of rapid publication (~4 months) of short manuscripts of especially high scientific value, with newsworthy quality. Letters, in final published form, have a maximum of four journal pages – no exceptions. At submission time, to be considered as a Letter, manuscripts must be no more than 15 pages in length, counting the title page and each figure and table as a separate page. Specific reasons for accelerated publication include (1) timeliness, (2) special significance, and (3) to bring attention to something that is of general interest to scientists outside the specific field of study. Cover letters should indicate precisely why a manuscript meets at least two if not all three of these requirements. An additional principal consideration a prospective author should keep in mind is whether a cohesive story can be told in the four-page limit: it is frequently better to have a longer paper appear as a regular manuscript than a less coherent four-page Letter with several deposited items. A manuscript submitted for consideration as a Letter that is either too long or not appropriate may be either returned to the author or, with the author’s approval, converted to an Article. In order to maintain Letters as a viable route for rapid publication, manuscripts will only be accepted if little or no revision is found to be necessary after the reviews are complete; if extensive revision is required, the manuscript will ordinarily be rejected. For this reason, rejection does not imply that the submission is of no worth: papers that would have been given “major revisions” as a scientific Article will usually be rejected as a Letter. However, a revised manuscript can be resubmitted later for (re)consideration as a Letter or Article.

Perspectives can be a preview of an emerging field of study, or a review of an existing field, with a focus on recent developments, and thoughts as to where and how the field is expected to advance. They can be interdisciplinary papers to address a topic that falls at the boundary of Earth and planetary materials with other disciplines. Appropriate research matter involves, but is by no means limited, intersections with engineering, physics, environmental science, medicine, microbiology, or astrobiology, to name just a few possibilities. (12 typeset pages max; prefer smaller.)

Review Articles cover subjects of general interest, and are published in several venues by MSA. The RiMG series publishes review chapters, associated with a short course and theme. Elements publishes shorter review articles that also involve a specific theme. Am Min publishes stand-alone Review Articles or with editor permission, can publish several theme-oriented reviews as part of a Special Section, absent the short-course of an RiMG volume or the page restrictions of ElementsReview Articles should not merely be a reiteration of previously published data, but should serve to selectively assemble previously published information and then analyze and reinterpret it in such a way so as to provide new insights. Review Articles are subject to the same review procedures as other technical manuscripts, but may be longer than the typical Article.

Highlights and Breakthroughs comprise summaries (one page or less) that provide additional perspective on new articles that appear in Am Min, or other key topics in the Earth and Planetary Materials published in other journals. These papers are under most circumstances submitted by invitation from one of the Editors (as further indicated by reviewer recommendations of papers submitted to Am Min), but unsolicited papers will be considered.

Special Collections (also known as Special Sections) are a means by which the journal publishes a set of related Articles printed or presented together under a theme of the special collection associate editor’s choosing. These themes may be associated with an emerging field, or a related set of important advances in an existing field of study, and are typically handled by a Special Collection Associate Editor (AE). The Special Collection AE will solicit papers for the Special Collection and reviews for each submission, and then make formal recommendations to the Principal Editors to accept or reject — all the tasks and responsibilities of a regular associate editor. It is the special collection AE’s choice as to whether the section will contain only invited or also unsolicited papers. The themes may be associated with a conference, or not. The papers publish as any papers do, as they are ready, but then they are also “tagged” and “linked” to a special collection page. See the Collection Page. Please contact the editors to submit an idea for a Special Collection topic. Decisions on a Special Collection will be based on the perceived timeliness and impact.

Supplementary Electronic Files:Any Article or Letter can be accompanied by supplementary electronic documents, which may include additional figures, photos, or QuickTime video files, which can be uploaded at the time of submission at our online submission site. If a different type of file is needed that cannot be uploaded contact the Managing Editor.

Discussion/Reply papers involve brief commentaries (“Discussion“) on a previous Article, and the author of the Article is provided the opportunity to respond (“Reply“). Only one round of exchange is allowed. A Discussion must be submitted with 12 months of the appearance of a paper in the print version of the journal. Title your Discussion with the original title of the publication in question, and add “–Discussion” to the end. Title your Reply article with the original title and add “–Reply” to the end. The limit for a Discussion or Reply is 2 journal pages, or 5 double-spaced, 12 pt font manuscript pages. Tables and artwork should be absolutely minimal, and the text correspondingly smaller. For longer submissions please consider making it a regular article.

Book Reviews of books received by the editorial office are also published by the journal. The book review editor selects the books and solicits reviews; contact the editorial office if you need more information. View list of the titles available or contact the Book Review editor to suggest a title you wish to review.

New Mineral Names, Memorials, Award Citations:Am Min also publishes approved new mineral names and IMA committee reports. Lastly, as a service to the Society, the journal publishes Memorials and Award Citations.

You can always contact the editorial office for more information!

Click here to read the complete Information for Authors or Click here to start the submission process if you have read the Information for Authors already

About the Editors

Hongwu Xu
Los Alamos National Laboratory - New Mexico

Hongwu Xu is a Senior Scientist of the Earth and Environmental Sciences Division at Los Alamos National Laboratory (New Mexico, U.S.A.). His research involves structural characterization and thermodynamic measurements of natural minerals and synthetic materials, enabling determination of their structure-stability relationships at relevant pressure/temperature conditions. The systems he has studied include oxides, hydroxides, silicates, titanates, niobates, sulfates, and gas hydrates, with a wide range of Earth, energy, and environmental applications. He has a Ph.D. and a M.A. in Geosciences from Princeton University, U.S.A, a M.S. in Mineralogy and Crystallography, and a B.S. in Mineralogy, Petrology, and Geochemistry from Nanjing University, China. He is a Fellow of the Mineralogical Society of America and has published ~150 papers in peer-reviewed journals in geology, chemistry, and materials science.

Paul Tomascak
University of New York College at Oswego -New York

Paul Tomascak is a professor of geology and geochemistry at the State University of New York College at Oswego, where he is an Associate Dean in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. His research interests include geochemistry of crustal magmatic and ore systems, as well as applications of non-traditional stable isotopes. He received a B.S. in geology from New Mexico Tech, M.Sc. from the University of Manitoba, and Ph.D. from the University of Maryland. He was a Carnegie Postdoctoral Research Fellow, an N.S.F. Postdoctoral Research Fellow (at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory), and an Assistant Research Scientist at Maryland. He has served the MSA in a variety of capacities, including as Associate Editor of Am. Min. for eleven years.

Special Editors

Anna Pakhomova, Katarzyna Skrzyńska, Technical Editors, Crystal Structures
Travis Olds, New Mineral Names Editor
Kenneth Brown, Book Reviews Editor

Staff

Christine Elrod, Managing Editor
Kristi Bailey, Editorial Assistant
Jane Watson, Production Assistant

2024 Board of Associate Editors Subject Areas by AE’s

Benefactors

Sponsoring Benefactors
Gemological Institute of America
Excalibur Mineral Corporation

SUBMISSION INFORMATION

Submission Site

AmMin submission process  through the acceptance of a “first” publication takes approximately three to four months. Our acceptance to final publication is presently an additional eight months on average. The accepted paper is live on the Early Publication site.

Author Instructions

These guidelines explain the American Mineralogist publication procedures, standardized units, and style. We have organized the information in helpful sections to make reference easier.