specimen with James Smithson Medallion •
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1748–1832) was a German author who was a skilled amateur scientist with a great interest in minerals. The iron mineral
goethite is named after him. •
John Ruskin (1819–1900) was an Englishman, essayist and art critic who gained an interest early in his life for minerals. He authored a small volume of ten lectures on mineralogy titled "Ethics of the Dust". He gave numerous specimens to the British Natural History Museum including the well known
Edwardes Ruby and yellow
Colenso diamond. This octahedral diamond was a total of 133 carats and was on display at the museum for 70 years. In 1965 the diamond was stolen and to this day has never been recovered. •
George Frederick Kunz (1856–1932) assembled numerous important
mineral collections throughout his life, such as a research collection for
Thomas Edison. He also assembled the Morgan-Tiffany collection of gems which went to the
American Museum of Natural History. He was mostly self-taught in regards to mineralogy and
gemology, but his skills and knowledge landed him a position as a gem expert with Tiffany & Company at the age of 23. In 1903 the newly discovered violet pink variety of
spodumene was named
kunzite in his honor after his death. •
John Sinkankas (1915–2002) was a
gemologist, lapidary enthusiast, micromounter and author. He was a fellow of the
Mineralogical Society of America. In 1982, he was awarded the "Distinguished Associate Award" from the
Gemological Institute of America. •
Ljósbjörg Petra María Sveinsdóttir (1922–2012) was an Icelandic stone and mineral collector whose home in
Stöðvarfjörður was converted into a museum of local geology. She received the
Order of the Falcon, Iceland’s highest civil honour, for her contributions to Iceland's cultural and natural heritage. ==See also==