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Fabre Minerals


Initial Tucson 2010 Update

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Carles Curto Text: Carles Curto (curator of the Geology Museum, Barcelona ) & Jordi Fabre
Assistance from John S. White (former Smithsonian curator) John S. White


THE PEDRO GOY COLLECTION


Carles Curto Text: Carles Curto (curator of the Geology Museum, Barcelona ) & Jordi Fabre
Assistance from John S. White (former Smithsonian curator) John S. White

 


Pedro Goy Benítez (1917-2000) was born in the town of Esparraguera, in the province of Barcelona, but lived most of his life in Oviedo and Madrid.

Pedro was a ‘hidden’ collector, and very few people in the Spanish world of minerals knew that he had assembled a good collection through his hard work and excellent aesthetic taste.

He was self taught, a close friend to those that knew him, pleasant, and well educated, so his presence at mineral shows in the 80s and 90s was absolutely synonymous with a good conversation. He was always hunting for the most attractive specimen at the show, then matching his wish for beauty with the need for scientific knowledge, which he demanded of the dealers or he found among the many mineral text books that he owned.

Pedro Goy


He was interested in botany, mycology, and medicine, just to give you an idea of the range of his interests he wrote material that developed into what he called
"An almost encyclopedic glossary of the physical cosmos and nuclear physics".

We hope that through this page we can share the Pedro Goy Collection with other mineral collectors. It is a collection that represents, in a very special way, the dawn of modern Spanish mineralogy as well as the type and form of collection that was typical in Madrid and the regions it influenced during the 1970s to 1990s.

 

Cinnabar
Cerussite
Azurite

 

Cinnabar with Mercury
Cinnabar with Mercury.
Cinnabar with Mercury. Cinnabar with Mercury.

GE69P9: Very well defined crystals of Cinnabar that have excellent color and luster. They are on a matrix of quartzite with fine granular Cinnabar and with small tabular crystals of Barite and small drops of interstitial native Mercury. An excellent Spanish classic.
Pozo de San Teodoro, Almadén, Ciudad Real  Spain

Specimen size: 9 × 8.3 × 5.1 cm = 3.5” × 3.3” × 2.0”

Main crystal size: 0.5 × 0.4 cm = 0.2” × 0.2”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 57

Sold
Kämmererite (cromium Clinochlore)

GK7P9: Very well defined and deep-colored crystals on a matrix coated by a layer of very small crystals of the same Kämmererite.
Kop Krom Mine, Kop Daglari, Erzerum, Anatolia  Turkey (±1982)

Specimen size: 7.7 × 3.8 × 3.8 cm = 3.0” × 1.5” × 1.5”

Main crystal size: 0.8 × 0.6 cm = 0.3” × 0.2”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 285

Kämmererite (cromium Clinochlore). Kämmererite (cromium Clinochlore).
Sold
Cerussite with Galena
Cerussite with Galena. Cerussite with Galena.

GJ86P9: Very well defined crystal, extraordinary for its transparency, luster and color. It is on a rough Galena matrix.
Touissit, Oujda  Morocco (±1984)

Specimen size: 6.7 × 6.2 × 6.4 cm = 2.6” × 2.4” × 2.5”

Main crystal size: 1.4 × 0.6 cm = 0.6” × 0.2”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 335

Sold
Azurite with Malachite

GX13P9: Excellent miniature. A group of crystals of very deep color and intense luster and partially pseudomorphed by Malachite.
Puit IX, Touissit, Oujda  Morocco (±1980)

Specimen size: 2.8 × 2.4 × 1.5 cm = 1.1” × 0.9” × 0.6”

Main crystal size: 2.2 × 0.7 cm = 0.9” × 0.3”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 184

Azurite with Malachite.
Sold
Uvite with Magnesite
Uvite with Magnesite. Uvite with Magnesite.

GY7P9: Lenticular crystals of very well defined faces and edges. They have an unusual deep red color with high transparency and are on a matrix coated by rhombohedral crystals of Magnesite.
Mina da Pombas, Serra das Éguas, Brumado, Bahia  Brazil (±1996)

Specimen size: 7.9 × 5.4  × 1.9 cm = 3.1” × 2.1” × 0.7”

Main crystal size: 1.2 × 0.8 cm = 0.5” × 0.3”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 432

Sold
Columbite-(Fe)

GM67P9: Extraordinary group of crystals in parallel growths, rich in faces and having very well defined forms. The sample has been well analyzed and we’ll send a copy of the analysis to the buyer.
Itambé, Bahia  Brazil

Specimen size: 7 × 4.2 × 3.9 cm = 2.8” × 1.7” × 1.5”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 4

Columbite-(Fe). Front
Front
Columbite-(Fe). Rear
Rear
Sold
Hübnerite with Quartz
Hübnerite with Quartz.
Hübnerite with Quartz. Hübnerite with Quartz.

GP47P9: The morphology of these crystals of Hübnerite, some of them very flattened and with curious dark zoning, is very atypical. Only a few samples with this type of crystals were obtained in the early eighties. The vivid red color is extraordinary and the matrix, due the quality of the Quartz crystals and the presence of some crystals of Pyrite give the final touch to the piece.
Pasto Bueno, Pallasca, Ancash  Peru (±1982)

Specimen size: 14.4 × 3 × 2.9 cm = 5.7” × 1.2” × 1.1”

Main crystal size: 2 × 1.4 cm = 0.8” × 0.6”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 103

Order
Tetrahedrite with Quartz

GP96P9: Good sized and very well defined crystals partially coated by microcrystals of Quartz on matrix.
Mina San Cristobal, Distrito San Cristobal, Yauli, Junín  Peru (±1983)

Specimen size: 14.2 × 10.2 × 4.9 cm = 5.6” × 4.0” × 1.9”

Main crystal size: 4 × 1.8 cm = 1.6” × 0.7”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 297

Tetrahedrite with Quartz. Tetrahedrite with Quartz.
Order
Scheelite with Calcite
Scheelite with Calcite. Front
Front
Scheelite with Calcite. Side
Side

GV46P9: An esthetic miniature from a locality already historic. Its crystals have the dark tones typical of Korean samples, they have very well defined faces and edges and are very bright, with small coatings of white rhombohedral crystals of Calcite.
Tae Wha Mine, Neungam-ri, Chungju, Chungcheongbukdo  South Korea (±1985)

Specimen size: 3.2 × 2.8 × 2.4 cm = 1.3” × 1.1” × 0.9”

Main crystal size: 1.8 × 1.6 cm = 0.7” × 0.6”

Fluorescence short UV & low fluorescence long UV

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 358

Order
Cassiterite

GB67P9: One of the best samples that we can remember from the locality due to its crystals which are very much larger than usual. Faces and edges are very well defined, the twin is evident but slightly marked, and are translucent, having a very deep color.
Rossarden Tin Mine, Rossarden, Tasmania  Australia (±1980)

Specimen size: 5.8 × 2.8 × 2.5 cm = 2.3” × 1.1” × 1.0”

Main crystal size: 3 × 2 cm = 1.2” × 0.8”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 122

Cassiterite.
Order


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The Pedro Goy
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