Finding your own semiconductors: Difference between revisions
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On the right is an image of a typical Cornish mine dump, this one is at Wheal Prosper, St Hilary. Its been cut through to provide access to a field, and you can clearly see how layers have been deposited - perhaps from different areas of the mine, or different depths, containing different minerals. | On the right is an image of a typical Cornish mine dump, this one is at Wheal Prosper, St Hilary. Its been cut through to provide access to a field, and you can clearly see how layers have been deposited - perhaps from different areas of the mine, or different depths, containing different minerals. | ||
The art of collecting minerals from mine waste is known as "fossicking", scanning the surface workings and locating rocks that may contain crystals of interest. | The art of collecting minerals from mine waste is known as "fossicking", scanning the surface workings and locating rocks that may contain crystals of interest. We have been running workshops for some time in Cornwall where we take local families out to find crystals. Often the people we do this with have family history in Cornish mining, with plenty of stories to tell and knowledge of the sites we are going to. | ||
A very important resource is [https://mindat.org mindat.org] which contains details of many thousands of mines in the area. I often provide photos and information to this site, [https://www.mindat.org/gallery-83910.html you can see the specimens I have collected here]. | |||
==What to look for== | |||
Most often in the case of searching for semiconductors, we are looking for metallic mineralisation - the most abundant metal is iron, which is often associated with rarer metals. We are looking for heavy, red or yellow iron stained rocks - often coated in goethite, which is one of the minerals that comprises rust. | |||
Many of the mines here were working copper, which is also very abundant, mostly in the form of [[chalcopyrite]]. The copper oxidises and decays into green and blue minerals like malachite and chrysocolla, some of these secondary forms, such as [[chalcocite]] (or grey copper) are also great semiconductors themselves. | |||
Revision as of 15:14, 21 June 2026

How to find semiconductors in Cornish mine waste
On the right is an image of a typical Cornish mine dump, this one is at Wheal Prosper, St Hilary. Its been cut through to provide access to a field, and you can clearly see how layers have been deposited - perhaps from different areas of the mine, or different depths, containing different minerals.
The art of collecting minerals from mine waste is known as "fossicking", scanning the surface workings and locating rocks that may contain crystals of interest. We have been running workshops for some time in Cornwall where we take local families out to find crystals. Often the people we do this with have family history in Cornish mining, with plenty of stories to tell and knowledge of the sites we are going to.
A very important resource is mindat.org which contains details of many thousands of mines in the area. I often provide photos and information to this site, you can see the specimens I have collected here.
What to look for
Most often in the case of searching for semiconductors, we are looking for metallic mineralisation - the most abundant metal is iron, which is often associated with rarer metals. We are looking for heavy, red or yellow iron stained rocks - often coated in goethite, which is one of the minerals that comprises rust.
Many of the mines here were working copper, which is also very abundant, mostly in the form of chalcopyrite. The copper oxidises and decays into green and blue minerals like malachite and chrysocolla, some of these secondary forms, such as chalcocite (or grey copper) are also great semiconductors themselves.