Goethite
Collection:
Click the microscope button to view a thin section for this sample.
Microscope
Click the object button to view an object rotation for this sample.
Object

Fact sheet

Goethite

Goethite is an iron oxide mineral.  Although iron ores were found at several locations in Cornwall, iron was never a significant product, contributing less than 1% of the UK’s total output, even during the most productive years of the 1850s–1870s.

Restormel mine was one of Cornwall’s most productive iron mines. It was visited by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in 1846, and renamed Restormel Royal Iron Mine thereafter. The Queen’s journal records her visit:

"Albert and I got into one of the trucks and were dragged in by the miners.  ….  Albert and the gentlemen wore miners hats. There was only just room enough to hold up one’s head ……. we got out and scrambled a little way to see veins of ore, and Albert knocked off some pieces."

This specimen shows fibrous goethite with concentric banding in shades of brown and yellow, along with sugary quartz. It came from Restormel Royal Iron Mine, and was probably acquired shortly after the royal visit.

Chemical Formula: Fe3+O(OH)

Specimen no. TRURI: 801.1047
Location: Restormal Royal Iron Mine, Lostwithiel
Grid Reference: SX 098 614

Mindat http://www.mindat.org/min-1719.html

Additional images
  • Goethite 9 cm across
  • Goethite 3 cm across
  • Goethite 3.6 cm across
  • Goethite 8 cm across
Map
50.335299, -4.90428
Precision:
Good
About this collection

This Collection focuses on Cornwall and West Devon’s mineralogical and mining heritage.  The specimens it features are drawn from the collection of the Royal Institution of Cornwall (RIC) held at the Royal Cornwall Museum (RCM). 

This collaborative project involving the RCM, the Cornish Mining World Heritage Site and The Open University explores how access to the RIC’s mineral collection and the stories it can tell can be widened using digital technology.  It includes radioactive minerals from Cornwall that would otherwise be inaccessible to the public for health and safety reasons.

Sample details

Type
mineral
Category
primary
Category guide  
Category Guide
Title
Refers to any word or phrase that appears in the individual rock names. Names are generally descriptive; they allow users to search for broad terms like ‘granite’ as well as more specific names such as ‘breccia’. However, the adjacent descriptions of the specimens captures a wider range of general words and phrases and is a more powerful search tool.
Description
Refers to any word or phrase that appears anywhere in the descriptions of the specimens
Accessory minerals
Minerals that occur in very low abundance in a rock. They are usually not visible with the naked eye and contribute perhapssver, they often dominate the rare elements such as platinum group metals.
Rock-forming minerals
Minerals that make up the bulk of all rock samples and are also the ones used in rock classi?cation.
Timescale
Selecting one or more period, for example 'Jurassic'.
Theme
A term used to group together related samples that are not already gathered into a single Collection. For instance, there is a ‘SW England granites’ theme that includes such rock types as granite, hydrothermal breccia, skarn and vein samples.
Category
A general term used to label a rock sample. It is a useful way of grouping similar samples throughout a collection. Category names are often, but not exclusively, common rock names (e.g. granite, basalt, dolerite, gabbro, greisen, skarn, gneiss, amphibolite, limestone, sandstone).
Owner
The owner of the sample that appears in the collection. For example, NASA owns all the samples that appear in the Moon Rocks collection
We would like to thank the following for the use of this sample: