Bog iron

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Bog ore
Bog ore
Part of Wall with Hermai - usage of bog ore in architecture
Part of Wall with Hermai - usage of bog ore in architecture
Picture of typical iron-bearing ground water emerging as a spring. The iron is oxidized to ferric hydroxide upon encountering the oxic environment of the surface. A large number of these springs and seeps on the flood plain provide the iron for bog iron deposits.
Picture of typical iron-bearing ground water emerging as a spring. The iron is oxidized to ferric hydroxide upon encountering the oxic environment of the surface. A large number of these springs and seeps on the flood plain provide the iron for bog iron deposits.

Bog iron refers to impure iron deposits that develop in bogs or swamps by the chemical or biochemical oxidation of iron carried in the solutions. In general, bog ores consist primarily of iron oxyhydroxides, commonly goethite (FeO(OH)). It was discovered during the Pre-Roman Iron Age, and most Viking era iron was smelted from bog iron.

Iron-bearing groundwater typically emerges as a spring. The iron is oxidized to ferric hydroxide upon encountering the oxic environment of the surface. Bog ore often combines goethite, magnetite and vugs or stained quartz. It is not clear whether the magnetite precipitates upon first contact with oxygen, then oxidizes to ferric compounds, or whether the ferric compounds are reduced when exposed to anoxic conditions upon burial beneath the sediment surface and reoxidized upon exhumation at the surface.

In an episode of the TV program The Worst Jobs in History, presenter Tony Robinson was shown searching for bog ore.

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