Panasqueira siderite is not merely a brown carbonate accompaniment to Portugal’s celebrated fluorapatite; it is one of the minerals that gives Panasqueira specimens their unmistakable architecture. In the best pieces, siderite forms lustrous tan, gray-brown, honey, or cream-colored rhombohedra and disk-like tabular crystals arranged as stepped plates, rosettes, armor-like crusts, or stout sculptural masses. Its warm, earthy color sets off the classic Panasqueira palette: pale green to purple fluorapatite, glassy quartz, metallic arsenopyrite, black ferberite, brassy pyrite, and silver muscovite.

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The mine’s world-class specimen character comes from its geology. Panasqueira is a magmatic-hydrothermal W-Sn-Cu vein deposit in the Central Iberian Zone of Portugal. The ore occurs in stacked, shallow-dipping quartz veins cutting the Beira Schist Formation, with open vugs that allowed slow, free crystal growth. That open-space growth is the reason Panasqueira produces mineral combinations with such three-dimensional clarity: quartz points rising through siderite, apatite crystals perched on siderite plates, arsenopyrite sprays bristling above mica, and occasional ferberite blades anchoring the whole composition.
In the accepted Panasqueira paragenesis, siderite belongs to the pyrrhotite-alteration stage, following the main sulfide stage and preceding the late carbonate stage of dolomite and calcite. That position is important to collectors. It explains why siderite is so often seen draping, coating, or overgrowing earlier sulfides and quartz, and why later calcite or dolomite may appear as pale crusts on the backs or edges of siderite-rich specimens.
Panasqueira has been mined for more than a century and remains an active industrial tungsten operation. Its best siderites therefore occupy a special niche: they are modern classics from a living European mine, yet many of the finest combinations already carry the aura of old finds, old collections, and mine-level provenance. Collectors look for sharp, lustrous, well-formed siderite crystals; clean contrast with fluorapatite or quartz; undamaged exposed rhombs; and the unmistakable Panasqueira combination of geometry, metallic accent, and open-space balance.

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Search for specimens: View all siderite specimens from Panasqueira Mines, Portugal
The Panasqueira Mines lie in the Covilhã–Fundão area of Castelo Branco District, central Portugal, on the southern edge of the Serra da Estrela region. The mining center commonly known as Panasqueira covers the Panasqueira and Vale da Ermida mining fields, with modern operations centered at Barroca Grande, near Aldeia de São Francisco de Assis.
Geologically, Panasqueira is a classic vein-type tungsten-tin-copper deposit. The orebody is not a single vein but a stacked system of sub-horizontal quartz veins, dipping gently southwest, hosted by schists, shales, greywackes, and quartzites of the Beira Schist Formation. The mineralized system is linked to Variscan granitic magmatism, with concealed and nearby granite bodies providing the heat and fluids for the hydrothermal veins. In the working mine, the economically important veins contain wolframite, arsenopyrite, pyrite, chalcopyrite, cassiterite, and related minerals; the collector-quality pockets are the open spaces in those quartz veins.
Panasqueira’s mineral sequence is usually summarized in four broad stages. The first oxide-silicate stage produced quartz, wolframite, and cassiterite. The main sulfide stage followed with pyrite, arsenopyrite, pyrrhotite, sphalerite, and chalcopyrite. Siderite is characteristic of the subsequent pyrrhotite-alteration stage, together with marcasite, galena, and Pb-Bi-Ag sulfosalts. Dolomite and calcite belong to a later carbonate stage. This sequence is visible on many specimens: early quartz and ferberite, metallic sulfides, siderite as tan to brown rhombs or plates, and late pale carbonate crusts.
The modern mining story begins in the late nineteenth century. A mining company was founded in 1896 to mine tungsten at Panasqueira, and the operation has continued more or less continuously for over a century, interrupted only briefly at the end of World War II and again during the difficult mid-1990s tungsten market. Early work focused on Cabeço do Pião, also known as Rio, where a treatment plant was built near the Zêzere River in 1904. As richer veins were developed nearer Panasqueira and Barroca Grande, the district evolved into a large integrated underground mine.
The first great expansion came with World War I, when the number of workers rose sharply and the company allowed individuals to work small surface vein exposures and sell ore back to the operation. During the high tungsten-price years from the mid-1930s through World War II, Panasqueira became one of the strategic wolfram sources of neutral Portugal. By 1943, the organized workforce had reached nearly 5,800, and thousands of individual miners were also working small veins on the surrounding hills.
The later history is a cycle of mechanization, price pressure, closure, and renewal. The mine shifted increasingly to mechanized room-and-pillar mining after the 1970s. Level 2 extraction began in 1982. The mine closed at the end of 1993, reopened in January 1995, and by 1998 had moved milling operations to Barroca Grande. Today it remains an active underground tungsten mine producing tungsten, tin, and copper concentrates under Almonty ownership, with development and drilling directed toward Level 4.
Collecting access should be understood in the context of an active industrial mine. Panasqueira is not an open collecting locality where visitors can freely enter workings or collect from underground. Specimens reach the market through mine-controlled channels, the official crystal shop at Barroca Grande, local miners and mine staff under company oversight, and long-established dealers. The mine’s own crystal shop has been described as supervised by geology staff, with underground workers responsible for bringing crystals to the shop and proceeds shared in a way that supports local miners’ families. That formalized specimen flow is one reason Panasqueira material often appears with unusually good locality confidence compared with many active-mine specimens.
Notable finds span many species, but the siderites stand out because they participate in so many of the mine’s iconic combinations. Large sculptural siderites from Level 2 have been recorded with calcite, pyrite, and ferberite; Level 3 pieces are known with ferberite, pyrite, chalcopyrite, and calcite-dolomite; and cabinet specimens of siderite on sphalerite have appeared in Portuguese museum displays. The most desirable siderite-bearing Panasqueira specimens are not necessarily the largest; the best are those in which the siderite gives structure to the whole piece rather than serving as background.
Panasqueira siderite is most often seen as sharply crystallized FeCO3 in tan, brown, gray-brown, yellowish, cream, or locally darker tones. Fresh, lustrous faces can appear almost silky or pearly under raking light, while older or more exposed crystals may show a duller oxidized brown skin. The best crystals have a warm, refined luster rather than the glassy brilliance of quartz or apatite, and that contrast is part of their appeal.
The classic habit is rhombohedral, but Panasqueira siderite often develops as flattened tabular rhombs, disk-like plates, zoned pseudohexagonal-looking crystals, and stacked aggregates. On combination specimens, it may form a matrix of intergrown rhombs, a partial coating on fluorapatite, a drusy armor over quartz, or a sculptural cluster in its own right. Some pieces show large blocky rhombs several centimeters across; others show smaller plates repeated rhythmically over muscovite or quartz. Documented specimen descriptions include siderite crystals around 0.6–0.9 cm on smaller fluorapatite combinations, tan rhombs to about 2.0 cm on large apatite crystals, a 5.3 × 5.2 cm main siderite crystal on a Level 3 Fabre specimen, and a 6.8 cm rhomb on a large Level 2 siderite combination.
The finest Panasqueira siderite specimens usually depend on association. Fluorapatite is the most famous partner: pale green, gray-green, colorless, or purple-zoned apatite crystals perched on tan siderite plates are among the mine’s signature looks. Quartz is another essential association, especially transparent to milky crystals rising through or from siderite. Ferberite provides black metallic contrast, typically as bladed crystals beneath or beside siderite. Pyrite commonly appears as tiny sparkling crystals on siderite faces, sometimes peppering the surfaces so evenly that the siderite seems dusted with gold. Arsenopyrite, chalcopyrite, sphalerite, muscovite, cassiterite, calcite, and dolomite also occur in notable combinations.
Quality is judged by the usual mineral-collector criteria, but with Panasqueira-specific emphasis. A top siderite should have strong crystal definition, not merely massive carbonate. It should show the locality’s characteristic geometry: stacked plates, sharp rhombs, preferential coatings, or a balanced matrix supporting apatite, quartz, or metallic species. Luster matters greatly; matte brown masses are commoner and less desirable than bright tan or gray-brown rhombs. Color contrast is a major value factor, especially where pale green fluorapatite, white quartz, black ferberite, or brassy pyrite gives the siderite a stage.
Condition is critical. Siderite has perfect rhombohedral cleavage, and Panasqueira crystals commonly chip along edges or show exposed cleavage faces. Because the best pieces are often complex and three-dimensional, protruding apatite, quartz, or siderite corners are vulnerable. Many acceptable cabinet specimens have one hidden or peripheral contact, but broken focal rhombs, bruised apatite faces, or crushed siderite coatings reduce desirability sharply.
Size alone is not enough. A small cabinet specimen with clean apatite perched on lustrous zoned siderite may be more collectible than a larger, dull siderite mass. Conversely, a large freestanding cluster of lustrous, undamaged siderite rhombs on ferberite or sphalerite is genuinely important, because Panasqueira siderite is better known in combinations than as large isolated carbonate display pieces.
Panasqueira siderite remains available, but the collector should distinguish between common association material and high-grade locality classics. Small to miniature pieces with siderite, quartz, pyrite, and muscovite appear regularly. Fine fluorapatite-on-siderite combinations are more competitive. Large, clean, sculptural siderite-dominant cabinet specimens, especially with ferberite, sphalerite, or old collection provenance, are much scarcer.
The main authenticity concern is not artificial color treatment. Siderite from this locality is naturally tan to brown, and there is little incentive to dye or heat it. The more realistic issues are repaired specimens, glued matrix assemblies, polished or modified quartz, and vague locality claims attached to generic “Portugal” material. Complex Panasqueira pieces can be fragile, and legitimate repairs are not unusual on older cabinet specimens; what matters is disclosure. Examine crystal bases, contact points, and any unusually perfect junction between apatite, quartz, and siderite under magnification and long-wave UV. Glue can fluoresce, form meniscus-like rims, or collect dust differently from the natural matrix.
Be cautious with highly dramatic apatite-on-siderite pieces offered without scale, provenance, or multiple views. Panasqueira associations are distinctive but not impossible to imitate visually by assembling compatible minerals. Natural Panasqueira growth commonly shows coherent relationships: siderite plates following the surfaces of quartz or apatite, pyrite microcrystals dusting siderite, mica beneath sulfides, and later carbonate on backs or cavities. A crystal that appears to sit on an unrelated matrix with no mineralogical transition deserves closer inspection.
Condition problems are common and often understandable. Siderite cleaves; apatite bruises; quartz tips chip; arsenopyrite can be sharp but brittle; and pyrite coatings can abrade. The backs of specimens may have calcite-dolomite crusts, saw marks, contacts, or remnants of mine breakage. These are not automatically disqualifying. The decisive question is whether the visible display face retains sharp, natural crystal surfaces and whether any restoration has been honestly stated.
Storage is straightforward but should be gentle. Keep Panasqueira siderite away from repeated wetting, acids, ultrasonic cleaning, and heat shock. A dry brush and air bulb are safer than water. Do not test a valuable specimen with acid; siderite reacts slowly compared with calcite, but acid will etch surfaces and may damage associated calcite, dolomite, apatite, or sulfides. For dusty specimens with pyrite or arsenopyrite, avoid aggressive cleaning that can strip the fine metallic accents that make the piece recognizably Panasqueira.
Market availability is strongest through specialist dealers, European collections, Portuguese sources, auction archives, and the ongoing trickle from the mine. Older pieces from the 1970s through early 2000s are especially desirable when they combine good aesthetics with labels from known dealers or collections. The best examples carry more than a locality name; they show the Panasqueira look at a glance.
The Panasqueira story begins in scrub and charcoal smoke, not in a laboratory. At the end of the nineteenth century, the hills were covered with heather, broom, arbutus, and pine, plants cut and burned by charcoal-makers who sold their product in Fundão and Covilhã. One of those men, remembered only by the nickname O Pescão de Casegas, found a black, heavy, shiny stone. He carried it to Manuel dos Santos of Barroca do Zêzere.
Dos Santos recognized that the stone might mean money. He visited the ground, then went to Lisbon to consult the mineralogy professor and engineer Silva Pinto. Pinto identified the black mineral as wolframite. Dos Santos built a small house at Panasqueira, opened a rudimentary mine, and bought pieces of the ore from shepherds who found it in the hills. The image is wonderfully local: a charcoal-burner, a black stone, a businessman with an appetite for risk, shepherds bringing ore to sell, and a future world-class tungsten mine still hidden in the brush.
When Silva Pinto himself came to the site and saw how much wolframite was present, the story shifted from chance discovery to formal mining. The first mining registration under Firma Almeida Silva Pinto e Comandita was published on 25 November 1898. Early work was simple and physical: outcropping veins, hand work, and a primitive washing plant. Within a few years, the operation was industrial enough to justify underground drifts and mechanical treatment.
By 1912, the district had one of its most memorable pieces of engineering: an aerial ropeway 5,100 meters long carrying ore from the Panasqueira workings to the treatment plant at Rio, near the Zêzere River. In that year, 244 workers produced 267 tonnes of 65% WO3 wolframite concentrate from 10,791 tonnes of vein material and 86,063 tonnes of host rock. Those numbers give the old specimens a setting. The same veins that now produce lustrous siderite on quartz once fed a ropeway stretched across the mining landscape.
World War I brought expansion; World War II brought a far larger human tide. During the war years, Portugal’s neutrality allowed Panasqueira tungsten to be sold into a world desperate for strategic metal. The organized workforce rose from 750 workers in 1933 to 3,300 in 1940 and nearly 5,800 in 1943. Around the mine, approximately 4,800 individual miners worked small veins in the surrounding hills, selling ore back to the company. The old pits and shafts scattered around the district are not picturesque relics alone; they are the physical remains of a tungsten rush driven by war.
For specimen collectors, one of the most telling modern details is the mine crystal shop. Panasqueira is still a working mine, not a romantic ruin, and specimens have had to find a legitimate path from underground cavities to collectors’ shelves. The mine shop at the main office installations formalized that path: underground staff brought crystals to the shop, a geologist supervised, and proceeds were shared between the company and the operator, with benefits distributed to help local miners’ families. That arrangement explains why Panasqueira specimens often feel unusually tied to the lives of the people who mine them. A good siderite-fluorapatite cabinet piece is not just a geological object; it is also a small dividend from a community built around tungsten.