With the acquisition of approximately 5,000 Pennsylvania specimens in 2006 that were formerly part of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia’s collection, research into the history and importance of minerals and mineral localities in Pennsylvania was initiated. These additional specimens, combined with the nearly 3,000 already in the collection and specimens on loan from the Bryon Brookmyer collection, make the Section of Minerals an important repository of Pennsylvania’s mineral heritage.
The staff is also diligent about upgrading mineral specimens on exhibit in Hillman Hall of Minerals and Gems and bringing specimens of display quality from new mineral discoveries into the exhibits as they become available.
The Mineral Oddities exhibit that the Section of Minerals displayed at the 2009 Tucson Gem & Mineral Show won the award for Friends of Mineralogy’s Best Educational Exhibit by an Institution. Click on the images below for a larger view.

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Head of the Section of Minerals Marc Wilson (at right) accepts the award at the 2009 Tucson Gem & Mineral Show |
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Row 1 (bottom: left to right)
- Datolite with Quartz—Dal'negorsk, Russia
- Rhodochrosite—Catamarca, Argentina
Row 2 (middle: left to right)
- Fluorite—Tennessee
- Calcite with Jamesonite—Baia Marie, Romania
- Beryl variety Aquamarine—Pakistan
Row 3 (top: left to right)
- Barite—Tajikistan
- Chalcopyrite on Tetrahedrite—Dal' negorsk, Russia
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