Mining knowledge: Nineteenth-century Cornish electrical science and the controversies of clay

Michael Faraday’s laboratory experiments have dominated traditional histories of the electrical sciences in 1820s and 1830s Britain. However, as this article demonstrates, in the mining region of Cornwall, Robert Were Fox fashioned a very different approach to the study of electromagnetic phenomena. Here, it was the mine that provided the foremost site of scientific experimentation, with Fox employing these underground locations to measure the Earth’s heat and make claims over the existence of subterranean electrical currents. Yet securing philosophical claims cultivated in mines proved challenging for Fox, with metropolitan audiences, including Faraday, loath to give credit to the results of these underground experiments. This article explores how Fox developed a way of modeling his mine experiments, using clay samples, to communicate knowledge from industrial Cornwall to urban centers of elite science. It argues that the mine was an epistemologically complex venue of scientific activity, at once seeming to provide a way of examining nature directly, without recourse to laboratory contrivance, while simultaneously being a place where knowledge claims were hard to verify without access to these physically challenging locations. In exploring Fox’s work, this study contributes to a growing literature of spatial investigation that takes the vertical as its unit of analysis.

A few miles north of mainland Britain's most westerly point, the pumping house of Botallack Mine sits on a small outcrop of rock, surrounded by sea and vast granite cliffs.Below the entrance to the mine's shaft, a deep underground network of tunnels stretches out for miles beneath the Atlantic.In 1857, J. R. Leifchild promised tourists visiting Botallack an industrial wonder that united the works of God and man.Botallack was the most westerly part of the world's leading mining district, extending from the Atlantic coast at St Just, eastwards past Hayle to the city of Truro.Yet this tiny peninsula was, through much of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, also home to a rich scientific culture.After introducing his readers to Cornwall's industrial underworld, Leifchild explained how the metalliferous veins, rich in the copper and tin that mining depended on, had originally formed: it had, Leifchild asserted, been Cornish natural philosopher Robert Were Fox (1789-1877) who had solved the mystery of this phenomenon.By showing "the probability of the circulation of heated water" in underground fissures "and the deposition of quartz and other earthly substances in cool parts, which had been dissolved by the water in hotter parts," Fox had explained how natural faults filled with metalliferous ore.These fissures, he claimed, made effective conductors of subterranean electric currents, usually moving from east to west in reference to the "position of the magnetic poles at the period when the process was going on." 1 This in turn increased the depositing of metallic salts within the fissures, forming rich seams of ore.By the 1850s, Fox's theory of the formation of mineral veins and its implications for the study of terrestrial magnetism had secured significant support from a network of eminent scientific authorities, notably geologist Henry De la Beche (1796-1855), whom Leifchild cited in his popular guide to Cornwall's mines.Yet securing this work credibility had been an immensely troublesome task involving the careful cultivation of social networks and new methods of experimental replication.Grounded in a series of experiments conducted in mines, Fox's claims represented a distinctly industrial approach to the study of electromagnetic phenomena at a crucial moment in the formation of the electrical sciences.This article analyzes this industrial context of Fox's work and, in particular, the mixed epistemological value of the Cornish mine as a site of experiment: here, in this place of industry and labor, the latest knowledge of electricity and magnetism engendered radical new visions of the structure and historical formation of the Earth.
Fox's vision of a subterranean world in which geological and electromagnetic phenomena were united was quite distinct from, and often opposed to, more accepted work on the electrical sciences typical to metropolitan Britain, most famously that of Michael Faraday (1791-1867) at London's Royal Institution.With Hans Christian Ørsted's (1777-1851) discovery in 1820 that the passing of an electric current through a wire caused a nearby located magnetic needle to move, connecting magnetism and electricity, and Faraday's observation of electromagnetic rotation in 1821 and electromagnetic induction in 1831, the 1820s and 1830s marked an exciting moment of electromagnetic research.Urban audiences eagerly witnessed the latest electrical marvels in (1783-1850) demonstrated electrical wonders to less socially eminent audiences than those of the Royal Institution. 4This article adds a new dimension to this increasingly complicated interpretation of mid-nineteenth-century British electrical science, not in terms of the social, but the spatial: it takes the mine, as opposed to the laboratory, as the primary site of scientific activity.Historians have already shown the importance of the telegraphic cable industry to the development of nineteenth-century electrical science.Bruce Hunt has explained how, throughout the 1830s and 1840s, Faraday related his theories over electricity and magnetism to cable technology: the phenomenon of "retardation" in submarine and subterranean telegraph lines was particularly valuable in sustaining a receptive "market" of engineers and physicists for his field theory. 5Likewise, Hunt and Simon Schaffer have both demonstrated the centrality of the cable industry and telegraph engineers in the development of electrical standards, which were crucial for the management of submarine connections. 6Mines were similar industrial sites in this respect, in that Fox employed them as places to mediate discussions over electromagnetic phenomena.This study of Fox's experiments contributes to what Wilko Graf von Hardenberg and Martin Mahony have described as a "vertical turn" in the history of science.Rather than interpret space in terms of a flat horizontal, this shift encourages a more complex understanding of the spatiality of past scientific activity in terms of depth; mines, balloons, caves, aircraft, seas, and mountains have all provided historical actors with new ways of thinking about nature, particularly concerning the Earth's geological, oceanic, and atmospheric structures. 7Work along this vertical axis was often technically and physically challenging, and involved novel methods of representing nature, such as geological strata maps or, in the case of Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859), cartographic portrayals of subterranean plant geography.Humboldt's examination of underground flora resulted from his training at the Freiberg Mining Academy in Saxony, involving four-to-five-hour daily shifts in mines.These experiences shaped his understanding of the Earth in terms of depth and layers relating to the deep history of plant development. 8For Fox, who met Humboldt while on his Continental honeymoon in 1814 and remained in correspondence until at least 1853, this descent into the Earth resulted in an approach to the study of electromagnetism distinct from those in metropolitan Europe's, albeit rare, laboratories. 9Fox's work encourages us to think about the ways that past scientific work along the vertical axis raised its own distinctive problems of credibility and replication.
Elsewhere, I have explored the links between Fox's mine-based experiments and his subsequent development of magnetic dipping needles for measuring terrestrial magnetism, as well as his use of local social networks to gain attention for his work from London audiences. 10Likewise, Simon Naylor has examined how Cornwall's industry shaped a distinctly Cornish approach to natural philosophy. 11Now, I want to argue that the use of Cornwall's mines shaped an unfamiliar approach to the study of electricity and magnetism: these underground locations were of great philosophical value, seeming to offer a direct means of witnessing nature, while also being of dubious credibility to audiences beyond Cornwall's mining communities.Hjalmar Fors has described how important eighteenthcentury mines, particularly the work of assaying ore, were in the emergence of the perception that chemical elements were the fundamental building blocks of nature. 12In the 1820s and 1830s, mines held similar potential for fashioning new understandings of electromagnetic phenomena.The problem, however, was that knowledge made underground was difficult to verify without access to a mine: unlike other forms of geological knowledge that could be communicated to metropolitan centers with the aid of fossil and stone samples, it was difficult to replicate invisible electromagnetic phenomena beyond the subterranean world.First outlining the industrial origins of Fox's contributions to natural philosophy, detailing the development of his experimental practices and scientific claims concerning the existence of subterranean electrical currents, this article proceeds to show how, after receiving considerable skepticism in response to his ideas, Fox developed a strategy for refashioning the mine into an accepted site of scientific activity.This consisted of a sustained social networking campaign, combined with the cultivation of a demonstrative method for replicating underground natural phenomena above ground, transferring mine observations to spaces of polite scientific discourse.By appearing to model the formation of mineral veins through electrical action in a small sample of clay, Fox asserted that his understanding of terrestrial electromagnetism explained how Cornwall's rich seams of tin and copper had originally developed.In particular, Fox's modeling of subterranean ore formation embodied his own theological understanding of nature as delivering evidence of design: that ore was extractable, yet not so easy to mine so as to be rapidly exhausted, appeared to Fox as proof of divine creation, consistent with his Quaker faith.As Jenny Bulstrode has argued, Fox's financial investments were intimately bound to his accounts of nature, with his theories over vein formation and subterranean heat intersecting with his capitalist interests. 13This article concludes by exploring the controversial nature of these clay samples, as well as their role in securing Fox scientific support, including from De la Beche.It was, after all, De la Beche's 1839 Report on the Geology of Cornwall, Devon, and West Somerset that Leifchild cited in his popular guide to Cornwall's mines.

Experimentation in the mine
Until the 1850s, Cornwall was the world's leading producer of copper.As the excavations of Cornish miners delved ever deeper beneath the Earth's surface, the importance of steam-powered pumping grew urgent to prevent these subterranean regions from flooding.From the 1720s, it was Thomas Newcomen's (1664-1729) engines that sustained Cornwall's mining, before the rise of the more efficient machines of James Watt (1736-1819) from 1777.This stimulated a flourishing engineering culture that prioritized the economy of coal consumption and boasted a network of distinguished steamengine builders, notably Richard Trevithick (1771-1833), Jonathan Hornblower (1717-80), Jonathan Hornblower Jr. (1753-1815), Edward Bull (c.1759-98), and Arthur Wolff (c.1766-1837). 14Contemporaries attached scientific value to these engineering endeavors, both in promoting geological knowledge of the Earth and through understandings of the relationship between heat, pressure, and work, particularly in terms of the management of high-pressure steam in an engine.The mine entrepreneur John Taylor (1779-1863) put it succinctly when, accounting for Cornwall's escalation of a steamengine economy in 1839, he declared that more had "been done by practical experiences than by scientific research." 15Arguably, no one better exemplified this than the Falmouthbased natural philosopher Robert Were Fox, who eagerly mobilized the opportunities that Cornwall's mining industry presented for the study of nature.Fox's father, Robert Were Fox the elder (1754-1818), was a successful shipbroker, as well as building up a commercial empire that included copper mining, tin smelting, and foundry work. 16Like his father, Fox junior was a firm Quaker, believing that all natural phenomena were united within a divinely created universe. 17Fox's commercial and theological values shaped his study of nature.Fox used his family's business connections to gain access to the majority of Cornwall's mines to pursue his scientific interests, particularly concerning the relationship between depth and temperature.Miners had long claimed that, as they descended deep below the surface of the Earth, a perceptible increase in temperature was encountered.Early in 1815, engineer Joel Lean emphasized to Fox the philosophical importance of understanding subterranean heat, persuading him to undertake measurements of underground heat in mines.Throughout 1815, Fox placed thermometers at differing depths in mines throughout Cornwall and recorded their temperatures over time.Collecting observations from Wheal Abraham, Dolcoath, Cook's Kitchen, Tincroft, and the United Mines, Fox's initial results suggested an escalation of heat with increased depth. 18Comparatively, he found the temperature in Dolcoath mine at 130 fathoms to be 63°, 75° at 160 fathoms at the United Mines, and 64° at 80 fathoms in the Ting Tang Mine, rising to 68° at 110 fathoms.Fox believed his findings to be convincing evidence that the Earth's subterranean regions possessed great heat. 19Equally important was the ratio of change between depth and temperature, with Fox asserting that with descent at greater depths came slower rates of increase.Down to 59 fathoms he observed an average increase of 1° per 35.4ft, compared to an increase of 1° per 43.8ft until 73 fathoms, and 9° per 64.2ft when deeper than 114 fathoms. 20s much as Fox's earliest philosophical inquiries concerned subterranean heat, throughout the 1820s he grew increasingly interested in questions of electromagnetic phenomena.If the Earth was a source of high temperature, then Fox's next challenge was to explain how this related to the formation of metalliferous veins.At the same time, following Ørsted's 1820 electromagnetic experiment and Faraday's 1821 demonstration of electromagnetic rotation, Fox was keen to connect his own work on heat to magnetic and electrical phenomena.It was Fox's belief that underground heat sustained electrical currents that ran through naturally occurring fissures in the Earth's crust.As these faults were moistened with saline water, this electrical action caused the deposit of minerals which, over time, accumulated as seams of ore.He further speculated that these subterranean electrical currents moved at right angles to the Earth's magnetic meridian, in a west-to-east or east-to-west direction.In this sense, Fox likened the Earth's currents to the motions of a wire around a magnet, as in electromagnetic rotation.Fox was not alone in his re-examination of the planet in relation to post-1820 electromagnetic science.At the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich, Peter Barlow (1776-1862) visualized the magnetic lines emanating from a magnet in his 1824 entry for the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana, which Christopher Hansteen (1784-1873) later found valuable when mapping lines of terrestrial magnetism over the Earth.There were, in the 1820s, interchangeable ways of imagining and representing the natural phenomena of magnets and the globe. 21To prove his own specific theory, Fox would have to establish the existence of subterranean electrical currents and, as ever, it was to the mine that he looked for experimental evidence.
In March 1830, Fox wrote to his local patron, Charles Lemon (1784-1868), describing how he had measured "the electricity of copper veins with a galvanometer" in Huel Jewel, Dolcoath, and Tresavean mines.Fox had fastened Slips of sheet copper two feet long, & 3 inches wide . . . to different parts of the veins, and an electrical communication was established between two of these & the galvanometer, by copper wire coated with sealing wax.The distance of the copper slips from each other was generally less than 20 or 30 fathoms.-The deviation of the needle was in some cases considerable, its oscillations extending over more than half the circle. 22 this way, Fox employed mineral veins within a series of electrical circuits.Later that year, the Royal Society published Fox's description of these experiments in its Philosophical Transactions, before Fox presented his findings in Edinburgh at the British Association for the Advancement of Science (BAAS) meeting of 1834 (Figures 1-3). 23ox informed the Royal Society that he had no doubt over "the existence of electricity in metalliferous veins," which would soon be proven "as universal a fact, as the progressive increase of temperature under the earth's surface is now admitted to be." 24 Working for ten-to-eleven-hour shifts, Fox claimed to have, by running electrical circuits through mineral veins, found electrical activity to increase with a greater copper content in a vein.25 These experiments, nevertheless, received a mixed review.In his 1832 Royal Society Bakerian Lecture, Faraday observed that while "Mr.Fox of Falmouth has obtained some highly important results respecting the electricity of metalliferous veins in the mines of Cornwall," he remained unconvinced by Fox's claims to have discovered the existence of naturally occurring subterranean electrical currents.26 Privately, Faraday wrote to Lemon in 1834, warning that Fox's theory remained speculative and observed that it was "easy to imagine forces with certain directions as a kind of abstract notion of electricity but that is  heat and a magnetized needle.Here, Fox again invoked his experiments as evidence of subterranean "thermo-electric currents."28 Christie's report was devastating, asserting that Fox's style was "so discursive, and the subjects to which the author, in different parts 29.Royal Society Library, London (hereafter RS), RR/1/73, Samuel Christie, "Report on Mr Fox's Paper, 27th June 1832," p.1.
of it refers, so various, that it is difficult to say what is the precise object of the communication." 29Fox appeared unaware that, in 1824, Edinburgh's Royal Society had published David Brewster's study of how the sun's rays acted on the planet, effectively converting it into a "vast magnetic apparatus." 30It is clear, then, that the mine was an ambiguous experimental site: it was difficult for Fox to build authority with the likes of Christie and Faraday.Mines simultaneously presented invaluable locations in which to scrutinize nature, revealing the inner workings of the Earth, while being difficult places to manage and isolate natural phenomena.When it came to the measurement of subterranean electrical currents, this troubled epistemological character undermined Fox's claims to have recorded such a phenomenon.Nevertheless, throughout the 1830s and 1840s, he worked to build credibility into his vision of nature in which heat and electricity were united in the formation of mineral veins.

Modeling and the mine
Fox not only experimented in dramatically different physical locations to the lecture theaters and laboratories of Paris and London.His alternate approach to the production of knowledge of electromagnetic phenomena also involved contrasting strategies for securing consensus.Faraday's techniques for transferring experimentally produced natural phenomena from his laboratory to a lecture theater, and making these appear to exist with minimal human manipulation, were difficult for Fox to emulate, given the distance of Cornwall's mines to the capital, as well as the limited access that metropolitan audiences had to these industrial sites.Instead, Fox conducted an extensive social networking campaign with Europe's science elites, particularly those in London, and developed a technique that appeared to model subterranean electrical phenomena above ground: clay samples that seemed to mimic metalliferous vein formation according to Fox's theory.As well as being physically distant from London, Fox was also something of an outsider to Britain's traditional science elites, being a Quaker and therefore excluded from an Oxbridge university education.However, throughout the 1820s and 1830s, Fox built himself a reputation with metropolitan audiences, culminating in his election as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1848.From the start, Fox had benefited from an already influential network of Cornish natural philosophers that was well-established in the capital.Indeed, between 1820 and 1830, it was two Cornishmen, Humphry Davy and Davies Gilbert, who held the presidency of the Royal Society of London, the latter of whom was an early patron of Fox's.Back in 1805, Davy had himself considered the problem of mineral vein formation during a series of popular lectures on geology.Examining how veins had originally been located, Davy explained how it was the "idea of the Cornish miners that metallic veins are sometimes indicated by the appearance of fires in the night over places in which they are found," which he agreed had reason, "as the metallic ores are for the most part perfect conductors of electricity, slow discharges from electrified clouds must often take place upon them from such a cause the effect would necessarily be produced." 31Davy here combined Cornish folklore and "popular opinion" with  Gilbert was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1791 and vice president in 1819.His support helped win Davy presidency of the Royal Society in 1820 and he replaced his protégé in 1827.This sustained Cornish presence at the helm of the Royal Society was invaluable to Fox.Following Faraday and Christie's skepticism, Fox wrote to Gilbert in January 1837, declaring that he could now prove "the origin of mineral deposits," which he claimed resulted from the "high solvent power of very hot water existing at the bottom of deep fissures, & to its tendency to ascend with any salts, with which it might have been charged through the upper portions of water in the fissures."Fox reckoned that circulation had "caused a transference of matter from the lower, towards the upper part of the fissures . . .& as the ascending warm water had its temperature reduced, & its solvent powers accordingly diminished, a deposition of some of the substances contained in it, might gradually have taken place.""Electrical excitement," he continued, "may have been produced by great differences of temperature in different parts of veins; -& in many other ways, the phenomena of mineral veins may have been modified by the circulation of water in the fissures at different degrees of temperature." 33Back in Cornwall, Fox mobilized his local social connections to press his claims.Nearby aristocratic seats like Penmere House on the edge of Falmouth, which hosted the Fox family and Astronomer Royal George Biddell Airy for dinner in 1845, were places where Fox could socialize with Britain's leading scientific authorities.The most prominent of these was Lemon's home, Carclew House, six miles north of Falmouth, where, on October 13th, 1846, the Foxes dined with Sir Roderick and Lady Murchison, with the eminent geologist delivering "a little lecture on geology." 34The following year, Lemon hosted the Fox family and Cornish astronomer John Couch Adams, with the Master of Trinity College Cambridge, William Whewell, visiting in 1859.Dinners at Carclew and Penmere presented opportunities for Fox to stake his philosophical claims and win over allies.Likewise, Fox's own properties at Rosehill and Penjerrick became sites of scientific socializing.Along with experimental displays over luncheons and teas, guests were treated to visits to local mines and Fox's foundry at Perran.Most importantly, it was the Fox family's development of a local scientific institution that helped transform Falmouth into a center of natural philosophy.Fox's children, Anna Maria, Barclay, and Caroline, worked together to found the Cornwall Polytechnic Society, having originally had the idea in 1833.Intended to promote engineering and philosophical interest among "clever workmen," both Lemon and Gilbert were eager supporters of this enterprise. 35After securing royal patronage in 1835, the Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society (RCPS) was able to attract significant natural philosophers to its 1836 exhibition, including William Buckland, the University of Oxford's premier geologist.
It was one thing to attain prominence with Britain's scientific elites, but it was an altogether different matter to demonstrate his mine experiments in places of polite social 36.Letter in author's possession, "Robert Were Fox to [Davies Gilbert], 20th Nov., 1837," pp.discourse.Fox's solution was the development of a cunning contrivance that would simultaneously entertain guests and advance his own work: a model to demonstrate how subterranean mineral veins developed that effectively brought phenomena only observable in mines above ground.In November 1837, Fox described this to Gilbert, having recently modeled the formation of mineral veins in an earthenware vessel, divided with a layer of moistened clay to form two cells.In the first cell he placed a piece of copper pyrite that was connected to the second cell by a copper wire running through the dividing clay, which contained a zinc plate in acidulated water.After several months, the liquid evaporated, leaving dry clay.Fox cracked this open to find the sample "divided into two portions, nearly parallel to the sides of the wall, & having rather a conchoidal surface."Fox found "the divided portions of clay g & h, were, like the metallic bodies, in opposite states of electricity, & one of them, consequently, in a more favourable state than the other, to receive the deposition of metal from their solutions" (Figure 4). 36He was, therefore, confident "that these experiments amount to proofs of the correctness of the explanations which I have given of the cause of metallic accumulations."In Fox's reading of the sample, this clay experiment effectively reproduced his examination of electric currents in mines.Soon after receiving Fox's letter, Gilbert visited Rosehill to inspect these clay samples for himself.In addition to the metallic deposit, Fox also observed the formation of laminae in the clay, developing between the two cells, from which he alleged that "a series of poles may be formed in earthy matter." 37By the direction of the laminae though the clay, Fox claimed to measure "the direction of the principal electrical action" at work on the sample, likening this to how mineral veins in mines mapped the direction of the Earth's subterranean electric currents. 38he modeling of metalliferous veins through clay not only provided Fox with what he believed to be verifiable evidence in support of his philosophical work, but a technique for transporting his experimental observations made in Cornwall's mines beyond their industrial origins to the spaces of polite scientific discussion.On April 7th, 1837, Fox read his latest paper on veins to an august audience over a luncheon at Rosehill, including Lemon and Cornish mining engineer John Enys.Undoubtedly Fox's most valuable acquaintance, however, was Henry De la Beche, who was a regular guest at Rosehill between 1836 and 1837 while geologically surveying Cornwall as part of his ongoing British Geological Survey.On one occasion following the reading of her father's paper, Caroline Fox noted that the family and their guests talked for several hours on the subject of mineral veins.De la Beche was won over to Fox's ideas "of galvanic agency," wrote Caroline with satisfaction, but he would "not yield the point of the fissures being in constant progression; he says they were all antediluvian." 39In other words, electrical currents might have caused ore to have formed in the past, but their contemporary existence remained unconfirmed.Fox's response was to give a post-luncheon experimental demonstration of his clay samples, which De la Beche found compelling evidence.40.Robert Were Fox, Observations on Mineral Veins (Falmouth: J. Trathan, 1837), pp.32-3.41.Ibid., pp.37-9.42.Ibid., p.53.
The great strength of Fox's clay specimens was their mobility.As early as 1836, Fox had presented to the RCPS an account of his earliest clay experiments within the broader context of his work on the formation of mineral veins.Here, Fox argued that water, charged with matter, circulated through fissures, and under "chemical, or electrical agency" deposited minerals that crystallized, forming mineral veins.Modeling this electrochemical agency through a series of experiments on granite and killas samples he had taken from a local mine, Fox found that after placing these in boiling water with dissolved salt, killas and granite "were both rendered conductors of voltaic electricity."Though only feeble conductors, this experiment seemed to confirm "that rocks become conductors of electricity, especially at considerable depths, where the great pressure of the column of water, and the high temperature, combine to introduce moisture into them."The surfaces of rock or clay, if covered in water with a saline content, became "an efficient source of electrical excitement."Fox maintained that if "these points be conceded," it would be "difficult to assign limits to the extent of the development of electrical action." 40Following his observation of veins in mines, he described how he had placed ores in saline solutions, separated by walls of clay to form cells and connected by copper wire conveying a voltaic current.By this electrical communication these ores, otherwise isolated, could be made to act on each other.With zinc and iron in one cell and sulfate of copper in another, beautiful crystals of pure copper could be extracted.This communication of metallic crystals by electric agency offered an explanation for how ores became mixed up in the same lodes.The majority of metalliferous veins coincided with the Earth's magnetic meridians, suggesting they obeyed laws of electrical action. 41n conclusion, Fox surmised that he had proven that electrical currents decomposed metallic matter, dissolved as salts in water, forming ore deposits through fissures.Admiring the "order and fitness" of these veins, Fox saw evidence of providential design.It was significant that if these minerals were dispersed through strata, "the labour required to obtain them, would have rendered them practically useless."At the same time, if the deposits were "more concentrated, their rapid exhaustion might entail incalculable injury on future generations." 42Were minerals too easy or difficult to extract, they would, Fox resolved, either be fast exhausted or practically useless.Here we see evidence of the way in which Fox's Quaker theological outlook, as well as his capitalist investments, shaped his understanding of nature and the benevolence of God's creation.
Fox subsequently took his clay samples to the Bristol BAAS meeting in 1836, and it was there that he was to secure a valuable correspondent for future experiments, the Somerset experimentalist Andrew Crosse (1784-1855).At his family home in Somerset, Fyne Court, Crosse had produced crystals through electrical experiment since 1807.Crosse had, in 1836, finally resolved to make his research public by presenting an account of how he had formed crystalline bodies through the influence of a voltaic current generated from a battery to the BAAS's Geology and Chemistry Sections.Following Fox's own paper on the role of electromagnetism in the formation of mineral veins, Crosse's delivery was in good company.With Fox demonstrating "the agency of a powerful principle in the formation and modification of metalliferous deposits," Crosse showed "how frequently and how materially this principle had been employed in the construction of some of Nature's most splendid productions," including "her most beautiful gems."Crosse's BAAS audience was excited "by the intimation that there was no production of the mineral world that would not probably be imitated by the ingenuity of man." 43 After this success, the Geology Section's chair introduced Crosse for his second paper of the meeting.Again, Crosse's experiments were framed in reference to Fox's research on mineral veins.The two experimentalists kept in touch after the Bristol meeting.That October, Fox replicated Crosse's arrangement to produce crystals of carbonate of lime from an electric circuit with water.Crystals formed around the copper wire, just below the surface of the solution.Crosse responded to Fox's account of this enthusiastically, with news that he had recently produced "very good crystals of sulphur from decomposing sulphate of potash -also the same from sulphate of iron," as well as observing that his "quartz crystals are growing slowly." 44Between Falmouth and Taunton, Fox and Crosse's mineralogical enterprises escalated rapidly.Crosse even planned to "attempt the imitation of volcanic minerals by exposing [stone] to long continued heat & slow cooling."He was sure that the constructive application of electricity would help this process, with Fox having "put the matter beyond dispute" that electric agency was the cause of mineral formation. 45Together, the two West Country philosophers appeared to be imitating nature's finest geological creations.Both were keen to promote their experiments to a broader audience.Making full use of their mobility, Fox took his clay samples on his 1838 tour of Europe.At the Académie des Sciences in Paris on April 2nd, the Fox family met with Antoine César Becquerel (1788-1878), who had conducted similar experiments for making metallic deposits through electrical action.When "Papa showed him the clay with a vein in it galvanically inserted," wrote Caroline in her diary, Becquerel "did not doubt the originality of the experiment" and asked for a precise method so that he could replicate the trial himself. 46Fox then exhibited his specimens in London, touring the city's leading scientific venues with his modeled mineral veins (Figure 5).Back in Falmouth, Fox wrote to Faraday on September 13th, 1838, with an account of the previous meeting of the RCPS, some eleven months earlier, where he had exhibited his clay specimens in which veins of oxide and copper had been formed by electrical agency.He informed Faraday that he had first moistened the clay with a solution of sulfate of copper and then placed the clay between plates of copper or zinc.Through the moistened clay, Fox then passed a current from a battery.When this voltaic action was conducted between plates positioned horizontally, horizontal veins formed, and when positioned vertically, perpendicular veins were produced.Very "decided cracks or fissures" marked the route of the current as it passed through the moistened clay, producing the copper or oxide veins.Fox declared that these "facts have a decided bearing on very important geological phenomena & it would appear from them that the directions of the laminae of the schistose & other rocks ought to indicate those of the electricity." 47Fox hoped this experiment would confirm his claim that electric currents operated beneath the Earth's surface.
Faraday remained a tough critic to appease, but Fox and Crosse had more success with William Sturgeon (1783-1850), founder of the London Electrical Society.The son of a cobbler, Sturgeon served in the Royal Artillery between 1804 and 1820, before working as a shoemaker, and then lecturer in experimental philosophy at the East India Company's military seminary at Addiscombe.However, he had a tempestuous relationship with London's scientific establishment, falling out with Davy and having his paper on magnetic electric machines rejected by the Philosophical Transactions.In response, Sturgeon founded his own journal in October 1836, the Annals of Electricity, followed a year later by a new society to promote electrical research beyond London's social elites.The Electrical Society's meetings on Saturday evenings in the Adelaide Gallery provided popular electrical demonstrations and experiments, rivaling Faraday's at the Royal Institution. 48Crosse's first communication to Sturgeon's new society described the manufacture of perfect rhomboidal crystals of selenite.Fox was equally keen to take advantage of Sturgeon's new Electrical Society and the Annals of Electricity.With memories of his rejection from the Philosophical Transactions in 1832 and Faraday's ambiguous attitude toward his work, Fox was almost certainly sympathetic to Sturgeon's anti-establishment

Clay controversies
Ironically, the greatest challenge to Fox's use of clay samples to substantiate his claims over the existence of electrical currents was to come from his own experimental assistant, William Jory Henwood (1805-75).After working as a clerk at the Fox family's foundry at Perran, Henwood became increasingly interested in how subterranean metalliferous veins formed.Working alongside local miners, Henwood developed a considerable knowledge of Cornish mines, becoming Assay Master of Tin to the Duchy of Cornwall in 1832.Impressed, Fox invited Henwood to collaborate in his early mine experiments.As Fox put it, it was "the singular power of exact observation in matters scientific that made Mr. Henwood the leading authority on the subject of metalliferous deposits." 51This harmonious relationship did not last long.In December 1836, Henwood submitted his own paper on metalliferous veins to the Annals of Electricity, rejecting Fox's experimental claims that he had detected naturally occurring "energetic action" in mines. 52While Henwood admitted that veins with copper could convey electric currents, he observed no trace of electrical activity through the earthy content of lodes and surrounding rock.Recently, Christie had shared in this skepticism, warning "that the wires employed, might by contact with ores, have generated the currents observed." 53Henwood agreed with this proposition: were subterranean currents actively forming mineral veins, there would surely be observable evidence of such electrochemical action, but, Henwood surmised, "whoever has descended into the mines has never been struck by the chemical changes going on."If Fox's production of sulfate of copper from his clay samples modeled vein formation, then why, Henwood reasoned, was sulfate of copper not abundantly found in mines? 54o Fox the first day.He vows vengeance." 59De la Beche had in fact known of Henwood's discontent with Fox's account of vein formation since December 1836, when Henry McLauchlan of St Austell wrote to him with news that "Mr Henwood mentions the lodes at St. Just as being opposed to Fox's theory." 60Henwood's skepticism of Fox's claims attracted sympathy.John Enys, for one, took Henwood's side.Enys had already expressed doubts to De la Beche over Fox's assertion that subterranean water currents conveyed mineral deposits, observing that with regard to "Fox's water circulation, I have always considered it impossible to accept." 61Enys was still unconvinced in December 1837, observing that "Robert Fox is very sanguine about his laminated clay effecting an important revolution in geological ideas and proving the direction of former electric currents." 62Such confidence was, Enys believed, misplaced.Of Henwood's criticisms, Enys considered them fair, writing to De la Beche in April 1838 that it was "So much the worse for Robert Fox," who was guilty of "rough statements" regarding speculations on mineral ore formation. 63In Enys's opinion, Henwood was the real victim of the dispute, having made himself unpopular among Cornwall's scientific community and jeopardized his position with the Duchy of Cornwall.Enys lamented that "Poor Henwood is in a great fright at Duchy prospects and with justice.I should be sorry to see him thrown on the world again, though as far as Cornwall is concerned perhaps his presence in another mining district, would be beneficial." 64This premonition came to pass: Henwood soon resigned from the Duchy.While some shared Henwood's doubts over Fox's theory, his rough manner had undermined his reputation.Henwood continued to make himself unpopular, in stark contrast to Fox, who appeared a paragon of dignity.In May 1841, Cambridge geologist Adam Sedgwick (1785-1873) complained to De la Beche that he was "amazed" at an irritable letter from Henwood and was "truly angry that he has quoted me, and still more sorry that I ever gave him occasion." 65Sedgwick had few doubts over Fox's work and, when he visited Cornwall in 1846, was eager to have a tour of the geological locations that had informed and substantiated Fox's "theory of veins." 66till, Henwood refused to back down.In January 1842, Lemon reported to Fox that Henwood had renewed his attack at a meeting of the RCPS.After the reading of Fox's latest paper, Henwood dramatically produced a letter from Fox, dated 1835, in which he detailed how he had known about Becquerel's experiments.Before the RCPS's audience, Henwood brandished a second letter, this time from Becquerel himself, reading its contents aloud.Becquerel asserted that Fox's experiments with clay were "much the same as his own."Lemon thought this but "a casual expression which proves nothing," but described to Fox how "Henwood then proceeded to prove that your theory of veins was not original."However, "as this matter was in no way before us," an anonymous individual interrupted Henwood and prevented him speaking further.Lemon demanded Henwood stick to the paper in question, requesting he "confine himself to his reply to Fox's statement."At this, Henwood "flew at all, & was most offensive."He turned on Cornish geologist Joseph Carne (1782-1858), accusing him of wanting "to entrap him into divulging a first of his case," and refused to listen to Carne's response."It was impossible to pacify him," lamented Lemon, who proposed the RCPS take steps against Henwood to prevent a repeat of the scene. 67gain, the manner of Henwood's attack on Fox's work compromised his own standing.He had misjudged the time, place, and audience for a critique of Falmouth's premier natural philosopher.Between 1836 and 1842, Henwood had done all he could to discredit Fox's theoretical account of the formation of veins, his experimental skill in detecting subterranean electrical currents, and his claims to produce ore through electrical agency.Fox, however, had a powerful network of scientific authorities to call on for support, including Lemon, Sturgeon, and Gilbert.Likewise, the RCPS was very much Fox's bastion; it was an institution dependent on his social connections and his family's philosophical enterprise.Henwood's dispute with Fox reveals that there were regional divisions surrounding the study of electromagnetic phenomena: controversies over how nature was to be conceptualized were not confined to provincial-metropolitan differences.
Undoubtedly, Fox's most eminent endorsement came from De la Beche.After receiving Fox's complaint that "Henwood is industriously attacking my views" in June 1838, De la Beche responded with a move that, for many, settled the controversy in Fox's favor. 68In 1839, De la Beche published his Report on the Geology of Cornwall, Devon, and West Somerset, providing a geological overview of south-west England.There were few geological subjects, De la Beche contended, so important, yet so poorly understood, as the formation of mineral veins, but he contended that Fox's work offered the best understanding of such phenomena.That rock fissures were filled by "electro-chemical agency" appeared to be supported by "the present impression among the Cornish miners . . .that lodes are contemporaneous with the rocks in which they are found." 69De la Beche agreed with Fox's claims that heated water circulated through fissures, vaporizing, and depositing salt and minerals as the water transformed into steam: within a fissure, the circle of rapid currents of ascending hot steam and descending cold water caused the steam to condense as it cooled, leaving behind veins of ore. 70Furthermore, that Cornwall's beds of tin and copper ore displayed a clear east-to-west direction suggested magnetic influence.De la Beche declared that, collectively: [The] experiments of Becquerel, Fox, and Cross, have shown that great modifications of a mineral vein . . .may take place by the reaction of a variety of substances on each other, so that the whole may be greatly modified.Every new dislocation has produced new conditions for these changes, and we can readily conceive that these which traverse them at an acute one, more

Conclusion
Fox's clay samples were intended to communicate experimental knowledge, accessible only in mines, above ground to the venues of polite metropolitan science.Fox was sure that these transportable specimens transformed refined copper back into ore through electrical agency, substantiating his claims that subterranean electrical action was responsible for the formation of metalliferous veins.Yet this alternate approach to the study of electromagnetic phenomena remained of contested value to many established examiners of electricity and magnetism, including Faraday.In August 1854, Astronomer Royal George Biddell Airy addressed the problem of the Earth's density by measuring the rate of beating pendulums at various depths in a mine.Having performed unsuccessful trials in Dolcoath mine back in 1826 and 1828, Airy sought a re-run at the Harton Colliery, in South Shields.During his preparations for this endeavor, Airy recalled that when in Cornwall in the 1820s he had seen "Fox, and he was possessed with the idea that the vibrations of a pendulum might be influenced by magnetic currents in the rocks about it."He was unsure what to make of this allegation and so sought Faraday's advice regarding if such an attraction would affect a swinging pendulum.Airy apologized for troubling Faraday "with what may be foolish questions," but maintained that there was no higher authority in questions of electricity and magnetism. 72Faraday's response was dismissive, asserting that if there were "general electric currents in the earth," there would be more evidence below ground.Fox's twenty-five-year-old claim set "the thoughts loose upon many points," but none were of real value.If the pendulum was not magnetic, then any speculative subterranean currents would not affect it. 73If part of the pendulum was magnetic, then, theoretically, any currents would interfere with the direction of its oscillations, but not the time it took to complete these vibrations.Faraday suspected that Airy and Fox were confused over magnetic and electric currents: if they meant the force of the Earth, then this would be similar both above and below ground, but if they conceived of some underground electrical force, then this was highly improbable.Faraday advised Airy to check for surrounding rock that may have "any fixed local magnetic force," but reiterated that this was not a problem for a nonmetallic pendulum.Citing his 1832 Bakerian Lecture on terrestrial magnetism, Faraday explained how a metal pendulum bob would move through the Earth's lines of magnetic force: 27. "Letter 712: Michael Faraday to Charles Lemon (25 Apr., 1834)," in Frank A. J. L. James (ed.),The Correspondence of Michael Faraday, Vol.2: 1832-December 1840.Letters 525-1333 (London: Institution of Electrical Engineers, 1993), p.178.saying little." 27Crucially, Fox had not found the cause of the force he alleged to have detected moving through the Earth's metalliferous veins.It was, evidently, difficult to verify or account for natural phenomena that could only be witnessed in a mine.Faraday was not alone in his reservations over Fox's claims.In 1832, British mathematician Samuel Christie (1784-1865) had reviewed and rejected Fox's submission to the Royal Society's Philosophical Transactions, concerning the relationship between

Figure 1 .Figure 2 .
Figure 1.Fox's depiction of his subterranean mine circuits, using veins, as made in Huel Jewel, along with an explanation of the diagrams.As published in the Philosophical Transactions in 1830 (author's image, 2023)

Figure 3 .
Figure 3. Fox's depiction of his subterranean mine circuits, using veins, notably as those performed in Dolcoath Mine.As published in the Philosophical Transactions in 1830 (author's image, 2023).
30.Ibid., 2-3; the paper was actually published in 1823, see David Brewster, "Observations on the Mean Temperature of the Globe," Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh9, no. 1 (1823): 201-25.31.Davy, in Robert Siegfried and Robert H. Dott, Jr. (eds.),Humphry Davy on Geology: The 1805 Lectures for the General Audience (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1980), p.106.32.Ibid., p.106.philosophical analysis, amusing his audience with accounts of traditional practices of vein prospecting.In sharp contrast to his own geologically informed assertions over where to locate copper and tin in relation to rock type, sixteenth-and seventeenth-century prospectors had employed divining rods to find veins.Davy recalled that the Quaker minister William Cookworthy (1705-80) of Plymouth, a specialist in finding china clay, was the "last person of any credit who professed to be able to discover metals by the divining hazel, and he was a very worthy and useful man and certainly deceived himself without designing to deceive others." 32Davy's careful juxtaposition between superstition and modern geology delivered a clear lesson on the advances made in the science of mining.But his lectures also brought the local knowledge of Cornish miners before London's gentrified audiences in a manner that Fox would endeavor to replicate in the 1830s.Fox also shared Davy's foremost patron, Davies Gilbert.A graduate of Pembroke College Oxford and author of no fewer than thirteen tracts on steam-engine efficiency,

Figure 5 .
Figure 5. Fox's watercolor of his clay samples, painted for the RCPS's annual report, probably in 1838 (Image by Michael Carver, 2023).