Mines Museum, located at 1310 Maple Street, in the Colorado School of Mines campus in Golden, Colorado had its beginnings in 1874 with the collection of geologist, Arthur Lakes. It includes the historic Colorado State Mineral Collection created by the Bureau of Mines in the 1890s. The museum serves as the state repository for Colorado’s mineral heritage. It showcases the most extensive public collection of minerals from Colorado, along with examples from around the USA and the world, as well as two goodwill moon rocks collected during the Apollo 17 mission.
My husband and I arranged a visit to the museum with friends in October. It was the second time that we had visited the museum-- click here to see that post--and we knew the friends who had not been here would enjoy the visit.
If you click on each photo x 2 it will enlarge to its fullest size for easier viewing of the labels in the displays of minerals, fossils, meteorites, and gems.
There were so many displays on two floors, so I decided to make this a two-part blog post so I can include most of my photos.
I was always a rock hound, an avid collector of rocks when I was a child and I wish I had a museum such as this one to visit when I was young, as I might have pursued geology as a career!
I still pick up rocks from different locations so that I can learn more about them. Colorado has a very diverse geology, so I'm constantly fascinated by all that I see as we travel around the state.
The Mines Museum attracts 30,000 visitors a year!
I particularly enjoyed seeing the display of these North Table Mountain rocks and minerals. as seen in the collage above. There was a view of North Table Mountain in the distance from the window next to the display. My husband and I hiked to the top of that mountain a few summers ago and it was like entering another world! You can see that post on this link.
The museum also has Mineral ID days where one can bring in objects from your private collection to have a geologist identify them. Those days are posted on the website.
One of the best things about the museum is that Admission is FREE!
Regular Hours: Mon. – Sat. 9AM-4PM and Sun. 1PM-4PM
(CLOSED JULY 4TH, CHRISTMAS DAY, AND NEW YEAR’S DAY)
The Museum also offers paid guided tours for groups of 15 people or less. For groups larger than 15 people, please email museumevents@mines.edu. See the website for more information.
Click on and enlarge more photos to view just a small sample of the displays ...
Weren't they all so beautiful?
In my next post, I'll show the moon rocks, meteorites, fossils, and the sparkling Miss Colorado Crown containing over 600 gemstones and 21 diamonds that we also viewed at the museum. I hope you'll come back to see more!
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I would enjoy visiting this museum. Terrific shots!
ReplyDeleteHello,
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful exhibit and museum. I would like to explore this museum too.
The rock collection is amazing, so many pretty displays. My son used to collect rocks. Great tour and photos. Take care, have a great new week!
Yes, fascinating! What an extensive variety. They would look right at home on another planet. Otherworldly.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful place to visit! When I was a child I remember getting a rock kit as a Christmas present. It had different varieties of rock glued to a piece of cardboard, descriptions of the rocks and a little hammer to use when out exploring for rocks.
ReplyDeleteIsn't it amazing how people have mined so many different minerals and devised so many uses for them! I'd have read each display as I went through that museum...then forgotten everything. It's happened in several other mineral museums before...just some kind of gap in my memory process.
ReplyDeleteI was a rock collector as a girl and still keep an eye out for good specimens. The museum had an awesome collection. Great photos, Pat.
ReplyDeleteAmazing diversity of shapes and color.
ReplyDeletethat looks like a lovely museum. I'm fond of rocks and minerals although I know little about them and their collection looks quite impressive!
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely museum and so good it's a free entry.
ReplyDeleteI think the rock collection is amazing, great displays. One of our sons used to collect rocks/gemstones, I know he would love to visit!
Enjoy the new week ahead.
All the best Jan
Pat - belated Happy Thanksgiving! I was in Ohio visiting family. The original purpose of the trip was wedding dress shopping for our daughter - so much fun! And successful! Of course, we wrapped a bunch of other activities around it ... So much for which we are grateful!
ReplyDeleteSo I am catching up on blogs - I can see why the visit to this museum will take two posts - so MANY incredible photos - I kept enlarging them and looking at the labels - some of them just don't look real! Abd free?? How wonderful is that?