This chapter describes electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy of iron–sulfur proteins. The first EPR experiments on biological systems were carried out along the same lines. Many spectra were taken as a function of the orientation of the magnetic field with respect to the axes of the hemoglobin crystals frozen in their mother liquor. The orientation of the g-tensor principal axes with respect to crystal axis systems was determined. Later, with the X-ray structures available, the g-tensor axes were found to approximately correspond to the heme plane and heme normal. Detailed information on the orientation of the haem plane may be combined with X-ray measurements to calculate the polypeptide chain directions and similar factors. A biological metal site formally does not have any symmetry at all, if only because it is ligated by a polypeptide made up of levorotatory amino acid residues. This is especially true when the protein ligation forms a part of the first coordination sphere, as in iron–sulfur proteins. © 1992, Academic Press, Inc.