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Home | Nature's Treasures

Nature's Treasures II: the wonder of minerals and gems

Flett Lecture Theatre, Natural History Museum, London

Sunday, 13th December 2009, 10.00 am.

Topaz crystals from Topaz Mountain, Utah, USA
Photo: courtesy of D. Green

Online Registration has now closed. Please contact Kevin Murphy before close of business on Friday if you would still like to attend.

INTRODUCTION

PROGRAMME

ABSTRACTS

JOINING INSTRUCTIONS

 

INTRODUCTION
Following on the success of Nature's Treasures I (see a report with pictures and copies of the presentations, at http://www.minersoc.org/pages/meetings/nature/nature-archive.html), this is another one-day meeting, co-organized by Gem-A (the Gemmological Association and Gem-testing Laboratory of Great Britain), the Russell Society and the Mineralogical Society, in association with the Natural History Museum, London. 

The aim is to provide a day of short talks which will be of interest to an audience comprising members of all three organizations, and to others who have not previously had an association with any of the organizations mentioned above. Students from schools and universities are welcomed and members of Rockwatch, in particular, are encouraged to participate.

The day will commence with coffee + registration at 10.00 am followed by the first talk at 10.30 am. Lunch will be followed by some displays with more talks in the afternoon.

 

JOINING INSTRUCTIONS

The one-day 'Nature's Treasures: the wonder of minerals and gems' event takes place at the Natural History Museum's Flett Lecture Theatre this Sunday, 13th December.

Entrance will be via the Earth Galleries door on Exhibition Road (nearest London Underground station: South Kensington - follow the signs for "Museums"). Do not go to the main museum entrance on Cromwell Road.

The event will commence shortly after 10.00 am, with coffee and registration. The first talk will begin at 10.30 am. 

On the ground floor, there is a secure cloakroom, where you can leave coats, bags etc. There is a coat-rack in the foyer immediately outside the Flett Theatre, but we cannot guarantee the safety of your belongings if you leave them there. Once inside the museum, go up to the second floor using the stairs, or if necessary the lift (ask security staff for assistance). Entrance to the Flett Theatre is to the left of the stairs (large glass doors). There will be signs to guide you.

There are bathroom facilities between the first and second floors.

A sandwich lunch, will be served ~1.00 pm, when you will have the chance to visit a selection of displays.

Drinks will be provided during registration and at lunchtime. Those in need of refreshments at other times are encouraged to use the museum café on the first floor.     

Please contact Kevin Murphy (kevin@minersoc.org) if you have any queries.

PROGRAMME

10:00                  Registration and coffee

 Session chair: Roy Starkey, President, Russell Society

10:20                  Welcome and introduction

10:30                  Diamond a unique mineral and the ultimate gemstone
Alan Collins,
Emeritus Professor of Physics at King’s College London

11:00                  Teaching gemmology in the Emerald Isle — a geologist’s perspective
Martin Feely, School of Natural Sciences, National University of Ireland, Galway

11:30                  Break

Session chair: Alan Collins, Immediate Past Chairman and former President, Gem-A

11:45                  Mining the Ocean
Chris Carlon, Head of Geosciences and Strategy, Anglo American

12:15                  The Russell Society: Promoting mineralogy and helping mineralogists in the UK and Ireland
Norman Moles, University of Brighton

12:45                  Lunch and displays

                            Take time to view displays by Gem-A, The Mineralogical Society, The Russell Society, Richard Tayler and the Mike Rumsey (Natural History Museum)

Session Chair: Richard Pattrick, Incoming President, Mineralogical Society

14:00                  Nature’s Palette: minerals and crystals in pigments and paints
Ruth Siddall, University College London

14:30                  Two hundred and fifty years of mineral collecting at the Hunterian Museum
John Faithfull, the Hunterian Museum

15:00                  Break

15:15                  Building and sharing a mineral and gem database
Jolyon Ralph, founder and webmaster of www.mindat.org

15:45                  Gems from mines to market
Guy Clutterbuck, gem merchant and adventurer

16:15                  Close

                            Disperse to the Mineral Gallery or to The Vault containing gems, crystals, metals and meteorites, where you can discover the stories behind Nature’s Treasures.

ABSTRACTS

Diamond - a unique mineral and the ultimate gemstone
Prof. Alan Collins, King's College, London

The presentation will contrast the properties of graphite and diamond and deal with the formation of diamond in the Earth’s mantle, and transport to the surface. Physical properties which are relevant to the use of diamond as a gemstone will be introduced, and the reasons why some diamonds are coloured will be outlined in simple terms.

Alan Collins is Emeritus Professor of Physics at King’s College London. He has carried out research on the optical and electronic properties of diamond, some of which has considerable relevance to the gem trade. He has been involved with Gem-A for many years, is an Associate Editor of the Journal of Gemmology and is a member of the Editorial Review Board for Gems & Gemology.

 

Teaching gemmology in the Emerald Isle- a geologist’s perspective
Dr Martin Feely

The new Diploma In Scientific Studies (Gemmology) at NUI, Galway provides an introduction to gemmology for people with a general interest in gemstones as well as for those working in the jewellery and related trades in Ireland. It is promoted by the Adult and Continuing Education Department, National University of Ireland, Galway (NUIG).  The course provides the student with a broad introduction to the study of gemstones, demonstrates the laboratory techniques used to identify gemstones and provides hands-on experience in gemstone identification. It is an evening course and is now midway through its third two-year cycle. Thirty-three students have successfully completed the course. Two gemmology MSc research projects have evolved from this diploma course. One is focused on the characterisation of the University’s collection of gemstones; the other is involved in fluid inclusion studies of Brazilian emeralds. The programme makes full use of the University’s wonderful geological hinterland through fieldtrips to Connemara to study typical geological settings of crystals/gemstones in the field. Marbles, skarns, igneous and metamorphic pegmatites and mineral veins host minerals that include serpentine, garnet, fluorite, andalusite, cordierite and quartz euhedra.

Martin Feely is a senior lecturer in the School of Natural Sciences, National University of Ireland, Galway (NUIG) and is adjunct Professor of Geological and Environmental Sciences at James Madison University, Virginia. He teaches BSc degree courses in petrology and mineralogy and runs an adult education evening diploma course in gemmology at NUIG. He is also involved in summer schools for US university students in Connemara. His current research interests include: (1) fluid inclusion studies of a) Granite related molybdenite deposits, b) Brazilian emeralds and c) Hydrocarbon-bearing fluid inclusion studies, (2) Geoscience 3D visualization studies and (3) Investigating the interface between seaweed holdfasts and bedrock.

 

The Russell Society: promoting mineralogy and helping mineralogists in the UK and Ireland
Dr Norman Moles

Exhibits in museums such as the NHM include beautiful crystals and other mineral specimens with information on where the specimens are from, how they formed, and sometimes on their economic value. But who collected these specimens? And how do we know what they are composed of and how they formed? This talk is about the people who collect mineral specimens, both for their personal satisfaction and for the benefit of others (e.g. museum visitors), and the people who investigate minerals for the advancement of scientific understanding (mineralogists). ‘Topographical mineralogy’ is the study of mineral occurrences and their formation. In the UK and Ireland, the Russell Society supports amateur and professional mineralogists who are interested in topographical mineralogy, and promotes the conservation of mineral specimens and localities. It achieves this by publishing a biannual newsletter and annual Journal, and by organising field visits and talks by mineralogists. The talk concludes by considering the future of topographical mineralogy, an area of science where the contributions of informed amateurs are equally important to those of professional ‘experts’.

Norman Moles is course leader for geology degree programmes at the University of Brighton, having transferred in 2001 from Queen’s University Belfast where he began his academic career in 1990. Before then he worked for 5 years with a mineral exploration consultancy in Ireland and Australia. He graduated with a BSc in Geology and Mineralogy from Aberdeen University, and then obtained his PhD from Edinburgh University for research on the Foss barite deposit in Perthshire. His research interests broadly involve metals in the environment, specifically sedimentary exhalative ore deposits, alluvial gold and metallic contaminants in sediments, soil geochemistry and landscape evolution. He is a ‘dormant’ mineral collector, mainly of zeolites, and has published articles on zeolite occurrences in Northern Ireland. Norman has been a member of the Mineralogical Society and of the Russell Society since the 1980s and became Editor of the Journal of the Russell Society in 2004.

Nature’s Palette: Minerals and crystals in pigments and paints
Dr Ruth Siddall

Paints are made up of two main components; pigments which provide the colour and a medium which is generally liquid when the paint is applied and subsequently dries to form a solid surface, bonding the pigments grains together. Paints (and paintings) are often described in terms of their medium - we have all heard of oil paintings, watercolours and temperas, but what are the pigments? The coloured portion of paints are usually finely particulate solids, many of them derived from minerals or synthetic compounds analogous to minerals. The techniques used by petrologists are perfect for identifying these phases both under the polarising light microscope and using techniques such as the scanning electron microscope, electron microprobe and Raman and FTIR spectroscopy. This talk will present examples of the microscopic examination of pigment phases, from the mundane to the weird and wonderful, and how their identification can help us understand ancient and historical technologies and identify fakes in the art world. Examples ranging from Roman wall paintings to Victorian house paints will be used to illustrate this talk.

Ruth Siddall has BSc in Geology from the University of Birmingham and a Phd in Geology from UCL. She has remained at UCL as a lecturer in the Earth Sciences, but her interest have turned from plate tectonics to scientific archaeology and the analysis of cultural materials. Ruth is a member of the Pigmentum Project and is co-author of The Pigment Compndium, an encyclopaedia of the pigments used in worldwide archaeological and art-historical contexts. Her main research interests are in the pigments and supports used by Roman artists and has worked in Pompeii, Corinth, several Romano-British villas and on Roman-Egyptian material from The Fitzwilliam and Petrie Museums.

 

250 years of mineral collecting at the Hunterian Museum
Dr John Faithfull

The collections at the University of Glasgow's Hunterian Museum span the period from the birth of modern mineralogy and mineral collecting in the 18th century, to the present day. This talk will look at some of the ways these collections reflect the evolution of our science, and the social, financial and cultural aspects of collecting. In particular, it will look at the 18th century collection of William Hunter (1718-1783) and the late 19th century collection of Frank Rutley (1842-1904), the author of Rutley's Elements of Mineralogy. It will explore some of the reasons why these mineral collections were assembled, what kinds of material was collected, how specimens were acquired, how much they cost, and how they were used, by scientists, and others. The talk will also look at similar issues surrounding specimens, collecting and mineralogical science today. It will be illustrated by a range of fine mineral specimens, historical labels and other archival material.

John Faithfull is curator of rocks, minerals, gemstones and meteorites in the Hunterian Museum. He has been fascinated by rocks and minerals since a child, but also has a degree in geology, and PhD on igneous rocks from the Isle of Rum. He has worked as a curator in Leicester (1984-1991) and at the Hunterian (1992-present). His interests include historical mineralogy, and the topographical mineralogy of Scotland, Scottish gemstones (including Lewis and Mull sapphires, and "Cairngorm"), crustal and mantle xenoliths in Scottish dykes, as well as the geology of Mull, and geological conservation and access issues in general. He also likes speaking to specialist and non-specialist audiences about almost anything to do with minerals, rocks, museums or collections.

 

Mining the Ocean
Dr Chris Carlon -  Head of Geosciences and Strategy, Anglo American plc London

We actively mine millions of tonnes of sand and gravel aggregates from the seafloor, produce detrital gold, tin, zircon, ilmenite, rutile, monazite and diamonds from marine sediments and oil and gas from sub-seafloor sedimentary sequences under 2kms of water.  However, although the world’s seas and oceans cover about 70% of the planet very little mineral wealth is extracted directly from the ocean floor.

Economic ‘hard minerals’ are principally resistant and dense fragments carried in rivers to the sea and deposited along beaches and in shallow marine settings. However in the 1970’s great excitement was generated by the discovery of hot saline fluids flowing from cracks and depositing metallic sulphides on the deep ocean floor. These ‘black smokers’ together with the earlier discovered ‘manganese nodules’ were seen as potentially significant sources of metals, but the technology to mine them economically did not exist and they became geological curiosities.

With societies growing requirements for minerals, particularly in the most recent decade with the demand from the developing countries, particularly China, exploration and mining has turned to the earth’s frontiers. Diamonds have been mined 30kms off-shore under 100m of water in the world’s largest “super-placer” along the coast of Namibia and precious metals are being sought around island-arcs in the ocean basins of the SW Pacific and elsewhere.  The geology, exploration and mining of these diverse minerals make interesting comparisons

With an Honours degree in Geology from Swansea University and a PhD from the University of Manchester, Chris has been an exploration geologist for 32 years and has worked and consulted on mineral resource projects in over 40 countries for a wide range of metallic and industrial minerals. Working initially for Consolidated Goldfields in Europe, then BP Minerals in the UK, Sweden and globally, he later joined Rio Tinto in 1989 as a senior geologist in global mineral exploration and subsequently managed exploration projects in Siberia and Mongolia. Chris joined Anglo American in 1999 as the Vice President of Exploration Europe-Asia. In 2002 he transferred to Santiago Chile as Anglo’s Regional Vice-President Exploration South America and in 2006 he returned to the UK as Anglo’s Head of Geosciences and Strategy.

 

Mindat.org - building a mineral and gem database
Jolyon Ralph

For nearly ten years, the mindat.org community has been building a free database of minerals, gems and mineral localities worldwide. It's now the internet's most visited website for mineral information and the aim of this talk is to give a quick introduction to the operation and aims of mindat.org, and a brief view of how it may develop in the future.

Jolyon Ralph, founder and webmaster of www.mindat.org

 

Gems from mines to market
Guy Clutterbuck

Gem merchant and adventurer, Guy Clutterbuck, will give a presentation on the mining and marketing of emeralds and aquamarines from Zambia. He will also draw on personal experience in Afghanistan, Burma, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to explain processes used in the mining of the stones, how they are sourced, and ways in which they are marketed.

 

Online registration has now closed. If you would still like to attend, please contact Kevin Murphy by email by close of business on Friday. Download a paper registration form here. For further information, please contact Kevin Murphy (MinSoc), Roy Starkey (Russell Society) or Mary Burland (Gem-A) .