Fabre Minerals
FABRE MINERALS
High quality mineral specimens
Bringing you selected collectible minerals since 1971
Fabre Minerals


May 2010 Update

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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

 

Smithsonite
Smithsonite. Smithsonite.

GG14Q5: White spheroidal aggregates with silky luster on Limonite matrix. We note the locality, very uncommon and unknown by most collectors.
Silver Hill Mine, Silver Hill, Pima County, Arizona  USA

Specimen size: 7.4 × 6.5 × 3.4 cm = 2.9” × 2.6” × 1.3”

Main crystal size: 0.2 × 0.1 cm = 0.1” × 0.0”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 195

Sold
Acanthite

GQ16Q5: Very aerial group of distorted crystals but they have perfectly defined faces and edges. They have an excellent luster, a characteristic of the samples from this mine.
Mina Rayas, Guanajuato, Municipio de Guanajuato  Mexico (±1980)

Specimen size: 2.4 × 1.6 × 1 cm = 0.9” × 0.6” × 0.4”

Main crystal size: 1.1 × 0.6 cm = 0.4” × 0.2”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 242

Acanthite.
Order
Acanthite
Acanthite.

GR96Q5: Very aerial parallel growths of cubic crystals with perfectly defined faces and edges and partially skeletal. The Acanthite has an excellent luster, a characteristic of the samples from this mine.
Mina Rayas, Guanajuato, Municipio de Guanajuato  Mexico

Specimen size: 1.9 × 1.6 × 0.7 cm = 0.7” × 0.6” × 0.3”

Main crystal size: 0.8 × 0.7 cm = 0.3” × 0.3”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 180

Order
Silver

GE7Q5: Dendritic growths of thin elongated crystals that have a very good luster and color. On matrix, with Calcite.
El Bonanza Mine, Port Radium, Great Bear Lake, N.W. Territories  Canada (±1981)

Specimen size: 5.4 × 4.6 × 2.7 cm = 2.1” × 1.8” × 1.1”

Calcite fluorescent long & short UV

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 175

Silver. Silver.
Sold
Grossular (Hessonite)
Grossular (Hessonite). Grossular (Hessonite).

GJ51Q5: Group of very transparent dodecahedral crystals, on matrix, that have an excellent color and luster.
Jeffrey Quarry, Asbestos, Quιbec  Canada (±1985)

Specimen size: 10.8 × 8.4 × 6.5 cm = 4.3” × 3.3” × 2.6”

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

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 341

Order
Erythrite with Skutterudite

GC17Q5: Aggregate of bright crystals, very well defined and with good color, that fill in a cavity in a matrix of metallic sulphides.
Bou Azzer area, Tazenakht, Ouarzazate  Morocco (±1980)

Specimen size: 7.5 × 6.8 × 5.4 cm = 3.0” × 2.7” × 2.1”

Main crystal size: 0.9 × 0.5 cm = 0.4” × 0.2”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 105

Erythrite with Skutterudite. Erythrite with Skutterudite.
Order
Malachite
Malachite. Front
Front
Malachite. Top
Top

GH86Q5: Very aerial and esthetic botryoidal growth with very deep, vivid and uniform color.
L'Etoile du Congo Mine, Lubumbashi, Shaba  Congo D.R. (±1981)

Specimen size: 9.8 × 6.6 × 5.2 cm = 3.9” × 2.6” × 2.0”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 258

Sold
Quartz with Uvite and Magnesite

GF64Q5: Lenticular crystals of Uvite formed by a very flattened rhombohedron and a very short prism. They have intense green color and are very transparent, with small rhombohedra of Magnesite and on a very transparent crystal of Quartz. The association of Uvite and Quartz is infrequent at this locality and even more with crystals of the quality and the size of this one.
Mina da Pombas, Serra das Ιguas, Brumado, Bahia  Brazil (±1994)

Specimen size: 17.4 × 4.6 × 3.9 cm = 6.9” × 1.8” × 1.5”

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

Uvite minor fluorescence short UV

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 423

Quartz with Uvite and Magnesite.
Quartz with Uvite and Magnesite. Quartz with Uvite and Magnesite.
Sold
Cavansite with Stilbite
Cavansite with Stilbite. Front
Front
Cavansite with Stilbite. Side
Side
Cavansite with Stilbite.

GC46Q5: Groups showing individual crystals with very well defined faces and edges, quite rare for Cavansite which usually is seen in spherical clusters of very small crystals.
Wagholi Quarry, Poona, Maharashtra  India (±1993)

Specimen size: 8.4 × 6.4 × 6 cm = 3.3” × 2.5” × 2.4”

Main crystal size: 1.2 × 0.2 cm = 0.5” × 0.1”

Former Pedro Goy collection. Number 418

Sold


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The Pedro Goy
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