A collection of rockhounding and arrowhead (Indian artifact) field reports from across the nation. Join us for exciting geological and historical adventures involving rocks, minerals, crystals, fossils, and Native American artifacts as we include reports, photos, videos, maps and more. If you love rocks, minerals, fossils, and artifacts, then Rockhounding USA is your new home.
Rockhounding USA: an informative and media-rich blog with articles, photos, videos, and maps to a wide variety of rock, mineral, fossil, and Indian artifact collecting sites across the USA.
On this episode of Rockhounding USA, Chase and I travel to Mt. Ida, known as "The Quartz Crystal Capital of the World." We visit Judy's Crystals N Things before heading up Fisher Mountain to the Stanley Mine.We find hundreds of "float" crystals and track down the quartz veins that criss-cross the Ouachita Mountain range.
Here is a small collection of photos of our treasures:
Map to Judy's Crystals: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Judy's+Crystals+N+Things/@34.53085,-93.537886,15z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0x87089268399c9d97?sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjj9NCKgIrWAhWG24MKHbBWBZsQ_BIIeTAK
When you think of Diamonds...you think of the rich Kimberlite Pipes of South Africa.
But when you think of Herkimer Diamonds...you think of Herkimer County, New York.
On this installment of Rockhounding USA, we travel to the mines of Crystal Grove, about twenty miles east of Herkimer, New York, in search of those double-terminated treasures that await the seeker.
CLICK HERE for more Crystal Grove information. CLICK HERE for a Google Map to Crystal Grove.
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I know, I know...the title of this blog article is a bit of an amazing amalgamation of alliteration, but, as I sit in this hotel room in Portsmouth, New Hampshire on a late morning, it's the best that I can do.
My faithful fellow rockhound-son, Chase, and I headed to Oxford County, Maine on a quest to the quarries of Frank Perham...in pursuit of the crystal pockets in the pegmatites of this mineralogically-rich region. I will be posting a longer field report in the next few days, but for now, enjoy PART ONE of this TWO-PART (eventually) video about our experience.
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What rockhound hasn't gazed with geo-lust as they looked at photos of beautifully preserved fossil ferns? We seem to be "fond of fronds." (Okay, that was cheesy, but still accurate.) I remember, as a child, studying books and magazines with gorgeous, full-color images of various minerals, rocks, and fossils. The trilobites were fascinating, the colorful varieties of petrified wood were captivating, but there was always something magical about large plates of shale covered in delicately-preserved fossil ferns.
For decades I had heard about the famous fossilized ferns of Eastern Pennsylvania (Llewellyn Formation) and had dreamed of traveling there. The opportunity finally arrived during a family trip to visit our daughter in York, Maine.
As we traveled along Highway 80, a quick Google search made my heart nearly jump---we would pass just to the north of St. Clair, and St. Clair is home to the most sought-after fossil ferns in the world!
You have almost certainly seen photos of St. Clair fossil ferns. Due to the replacement of the organic material by pyrite (and then a subsequent oxidation process leading to Pyrophyllite) the fern and plant impressions are often a brilliant white set against the dark gray of the shale.
As my son, Chase, and I arrived at the huge collecting area, our expectations were more than exceeded. Nearly every piece of shale is covered in various types of plant remains, primarily ferns...it is a veritable fossil fern forest.
Here is a short video about this incredible collecting locale:
Directions: *** NOTICE: I have recently read that the current owners have closed this area for individual collecting. Please contact the owners prior to visiting the site. The latest information I have found is that the owners are Reading Anthracite. They offer permits for off-road, ATV and hiking activities, but may not allow fossil collecting.***
Travel to St. Clair, Pennsylvania along Route 61 (Central Eastern Pennsylvania).
If you are headed North on 61, turn right onto E. Hancock (which becomes Burma Road), if you are headed south on 61, turn left onto E. Hancock. You will drive exactly 2.8 miles and there will be a small parking area on the right just before the road curves to the left and goes uphill.
(Caution: There is another parking lot on the right just before this spot. That parking area is for a gun shooting range. If you pull into the lot and see some boulders and then several wooden stands beyond the rocks, then you are in the wrong spot...you will need to travel about another 100 yards to the east.)
Park in the small, gravel lot, and take the smooth gravel hiking trail to the southeast for approximately 850 feet. Another trail will break off to the left, take it. You will need to hike about 1200 feet down this second trail until you see a small footpath through the bushes on your right. Go about 50 feet down this trail and the collecting area will open up before you. It is quite extensive. (Don't worry, even if you miss the second trail, if you hike all the way down the first trail you will eventually hit the lower, western end of the collecting area.)
If you want to study and identify insects, then you have a tough road ahead of you. I've read that there are over 350,000 different species of just Beetles (that's a quarter-of-a-million!). And if you want to collect and identify Native American Artifacts ("arrowheads"), the number of different types (though much smaller) is still pretty daunting: over 1,000. One thousand different types of arrowheads, projectiles, points, blades, etc.
I only have THREE children and I still get their names wrong from time to time!
Fortunately, for those of us who enjoy walking along plowed fields and wading through waist-high creek water in search of these rocky links to our continent's past inhabitants, there are resources to help us. I have compiled a series of links to online resources that should be able to help you identify just about every tool or tip in your collection.
This simple to use and extremely helpful website contains a step-by-step guide that will ask you a series of basic questions (with pictures and diagrams) in order to zero-in on your classification. The number of arrowhead types is rather limited to just major categories, but I have found this to be very handy (and very kid-friendly).
(Click on the name or the picture to go to the website)
One of the largest online databases of Native American Artifacts, with thousands of reference photographs. This site breaks the USA into basic regions and contains a wealth of information about shape, flaking patterns, cross-sections, size, and age of every type of projectile and tool. I spend quite a bit of time here.
The name Overstreet is legendary within the world of collectibles. The Overstreet Indian Arrowhead Identification Database website boasts over 60,000 reference photographs and a (somewhat) guided tour to help you classify your points. You can search by Shape, Region, or Alphabetically.
Sometimes, even with all of the wonderful online resources at our fingertips, we still have difficulty nailing the exact category or type of our tips. TreasureNet is a fantastic forum where you can post pictures of your artifacts, and then a huge community of Indian enthusiasts will pitch in to help you identify them.
I will never forget my first discovery of a Native American artifact: a long, multicolored jasper arrowhead that was sitting exposed atop a mound of dark soil in our neighbor's garden in the tiny, quiet town of Doniphan, Missouri. The year was 1980.
Unfortunately, that exquisitely carved and beautifully banded blade has been lost for at least the second time in its long life. I would love to have it back again. It would be another nine years before I would find my second Indian relic, this time time along the shores of the Little Gasconade River near Freeburg, Missouri. A small rise in the center of a long, muddy field yielded multiple arrowheads and scrapers, along with several chip piles. Due to the quantity of artifacts continually produced by each season's tilling and turning of the soil, it was obvious that the area had been a Native American campground for many years.
Artifacts from near the Little Gasconade River, Missouri
Fast forward nearly thirty more years. I am now not only a rockhound and relic collector, I am also a father. And I have done my best to impart my passion for geology and history to my offspring. My first two children (daughters) carefully avoided these pursuits, but my third child, Chase, has been bitten by the bug. He has joined me in the shale piles in Utah splitting for Trilobites and has sifted through hundreds of pounds of wet sand and gravel seeking for fossilized shark's teeth in the deep South. He has scratched through the rusty, iron and silica rich earth near Mt. Ida, Arkansas to acquire the finest quartz crystals in North America, and he has scaled the heights of the Colorado Rockies seeking for pyrite cubes strewn about in the tailings of abandoned mines.
But lately he has been bitten by a slightly different (yet related) bug: Arrowheads.
We've spent endless hours watching the antics of Randy and Spike over at the Heartbreaker Relics channel on Youtube, or the predictable "We'll get back to ya" closing line after each exciting find on the channel TheDitchWalker. My son lamented that he himself had never found an arrowhead.
That problem was resolved....today.
After receiving a hot tip about a productive site not quite 10 miles south of our home, we spent 2-1/2 hours traipsing through a huge, flat field that was still moist from a few days of steady rain and littered with the remains of short, shattered corn stalks and withered cobs. Within minutes of hitting the soil, Chase landed our first and his first-ever Indian find: a broken base. By the end of the short adventure, we had a nice little collection of blades, bases, tips, and one whole arrowhead.
Enjoy this 90-second video about our experience:
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Almost exactly five miles east of Anna, Illinois, along Highway 146, a small rocky outcrop on the north side of the gentle incline yields a fair amount of ancient, aquatic fossils. Crinoids, shells, and Archimedes screws (bryozoans) abound, both having been weathered loose as well as in situ.
The layered outcrop on the north side shows the most promise, but the dirt covered exposure on the southern bank is worth digging through as well.