Album 7 - Oddballs
All rocks and boulders and portion of
those exposed above ground have these
white splashes beneath the coating of
green and grey moss. The white coating
may have developed due to the rocks'
minerals interaction with heat, only, I
am not sure.
Unidentified positive and
negative of a fossil. pic 4
(outside) with slickenside
/glacial striations. Not sure
what to make of it.
Top of bedrock outcrop
View from the top of fractured bedrock outcrop.
Uniquely shaped chert or chalcedony.
chert
Comet Impact Inquiry
"Science Related" not "Scientifically Related"
Will put mica from this rock under the microscope and hope to see kinks.
Other side with indentations and melt flow
Pebble with indentations
Quite possible limestone skarn converted by metamorphism to silicate minerals! Cochise Coll
When you have rocks, you make a rock garden. Northeast America cacti in bloom along with numerous other cold hardy cacti and alpine plants.
Native Northeast America cacti in bloom.
One of the pieces of wood in the exotic layer that appear to have been there quite awhile. Intriguing because I was able to see the undamaged follicles.
The other side of something hard, lumpy, red and diamagnetic.
One side of something very hard, lumpy and red. Diamagnetic. Have the a
Diamagnetic and quite possible, irregular cassiterite nugget, tin oxide, the primary ore of tin. Cassiterite is a
constituent of igneous rocks. http://skywalker.cochise.edu/wellerr/mineral/cassiterite/cassiteriteL.htm
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