Abstract

We present a “little big history” of the gold that either was mined in the Iberian Peninsula, or was brought there from deposits located elsewhere, by trade or by conquest. During Roman times, gold was extracted from the Peninsula itself. In the Middle Ages, gold was brought across the Sahara from very rich near-surface occurrences in West Africa. After the discovery of the New World, Colombia was the most important source of gold entering the Peninsula. Each of these gold-bearing regions has had a different geological history, and in each one, gold was concentrated by a variety of geological processes. The West African gold dates back to fairly early in Earth history, about 2 billion years ago, and resulted from closure of an ancient ocean basin. The Iberian gold is related to the continental collision that produced the Appalachians and their Variscan continuation in Europe, while assembling the Pangea supercontinent. The Colombian gold is associated with the subduction under South America of the Pacific Ocean crust that has produced the Andes. For each of the three regions we present a database of historical and active gold mining areas, and we summarize this information in maps. The ways in which Earth concentrates gold are the subject of much geological research, and we give a brief introduction to this remarkable topic, hoping that big historians will go beyond Carl Sagan’s statement that “We’re made of star-stuff,” and will recognize that “We’re made of star-stuff, concentrated by Earth.”

Highlights

  • One approach to the study of big history is to take some feature of the human situation and trace the history, from the beginning of the Cosmos, which has led to this aspect of the world we live in

  • We present a “little big history” of the gold that either was mined in the Iberian Peninsula, or was brought there from deposits located elsewhere, by trade or by conquest

  • Most little big histories will begin with fairly similar cosmic histories, because everything in big history has obeyed the same laws of physics, set up early in the Big Bang, and the chemical elements of which our physical world is constructed were fashioned by the same stellar processes

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

One approach to the study of big history is to take some feature of the human situation and trace the history, from the beginning of the Cosmos, which has led to this aspect of the world we live in. In this paper we present a “little big history” of gold in the context of Iberia This large peninsula, shared by Spain and Portugal, has had access to copious amounts of gold for most of its history, from pre-Roman and Roman times until the independence of the former Iberian colonies in the New World about two centuries ago. In this paper we will show that the gold that affected Iberian history was concentrated in a variety of different geological ways, and these are just a sampling of Earth’s remarkable virtuosity in forming rich gold deposits of many kinds This kind of little big history could be written for any of the other chemical elements, or for rocks like limestones or granites, or for petroleum and other fossil fuels.

GOLD IN THE HUMAN HISTORY OF IBERIA
HOW DO GOLD DEPOSITS FORM?
THE THREE REGIONS THAT SUPPLIED IBERIA WITH GOLD
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
Findings
VIII. REFERENCES
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