Secondary minerals forming speleothems are called “cave minerals” and are the results of complex interactions between bedrock, circulating water, and sediments of various sources. A "speleothem" is a secondary mineral deposit formed in a cave by a chemical reaction from a primary mineral in bedrock or detritus because of a unique set of conditions therein. In Carbone et al. (2016) the term “minothems” was defined, for the first time, considering the secondary mineral concretions forming in an artificial underground void, such as a mine or any other kind of tunnel (i.e. roman aqueduct, catacomb, highway tunnel, etc.). These voids can be carved in carbonate rocks, but can also be hosted in different geological materials, such as volcanic roc...