Goethites were synthesized from ferrihydrite in 0.7 M KOH between 4° and 90°C. As temperatures increased, the goethite crystals became larger and of less domainic character, and surface areas decreased from 153 to 9 m2/g. Surface area, oxalate-soluble Fe to total Fe ratios, chemisorbed water, Mössbauer parameters, and dissolution rate in 6 M HCl at 25°C are particle-size controlled, whereas mean crystallite dimensions, a-dimension of the unit cell, differences between the two OH-bending modes, and dehydroxylation temperatures suggest the existence of a low-temperature (high-a-dimension) and a high-temperature (low-a-dimension) goethite, with a narrow transition range at a synthesis temperature of 40°–50°C. Hydrothermal treatment at 125°–180°C of a low-temperature goethite led to a healing of the multidomainic, microporous high-a-dimension goethite into a monodomainic low-a-dimension goethite of similar overall crystal size with the properties of a low-a-dimension goethite.