Monday, November 28, 2011

THE MYSTERY ROCK: FECAL CASTINGS





LOWER SURFACE, PARALLEL TO BEDDING, OF SKELTAL LIMESTONE FROM BASE OF LINCOLN MEMBER, RUSSELL COUNTY, SHOWING CONVEX HYPORELIEF BELIEVED TO BE FECAL CASTINGS. (HATTIN, 1975).

A year ago I stopped at an outcrop of Greenhorn Limestone in Russell County, Kansas, to collect a few inoceramid bivalves.  The Greenhorn is part of the Cretaceous rock column deposited in the great Western Interior Seaway.  The Greenhorn is quite fossiliferous and all visitors are able to locate a number of invertebrate fossils.  As I was turning over slabs of the Greenhorn I stumbled upon a thin bedded piece of limestone that had a number of "strange" raised markings on the underside (below).  I did not have a clue as to the origin of these markings and really did not know if they were inorganic or organic in nature.  But, as many rockhounds often do, I  threw the specimen in my bag and then into the home rock garden.  I have often looked at the rock in my garden but could not quite come up with an answer as to "what is was".  Last night, in one of those serendipitous moments, I perhaps identified the markings!  I was rereading Don Hattin's tome on Greenhorn stratigraphy and there it was, I think.  A photo of a similar looking specimen with a caption of "convex hyporeliefs believed to be fecal castings"(below).  So, I realize that my mystery rock has a surface of pellets put out by some sort of "fish".  Now, every time I see the specimen in the rock garden I smile just a little.  Wish all the identifications were that easy.
mike

FECAL CASTINGS ON SMALL SLAB OF GREENHORN LIMESTONE.
  REFERENCES CITED
Hattin, D. E., 1975, Stratigraphy and Depositional Environment of Greenhorn Limestone (Upper Cretaceous) of Kansas: Kansas Geological Survey Bulletin 209.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

COLORADO AMETHYST


Wall of reclaimed Crystal Hill Mine with brecciated volcanic rock.

The Crystal Hill District is located a few miles north and west of La Garita, Colorado (western side of San Luis Basin north of Alamosa) near Carnero Creek.  The District was founded in 1881 by  prospector and mining man Mark Biedell.  The District produced native gold and silver from a collapse breccia structure for a few years before mining operations ceased, mostly by 1900. 

 Two small, short-lived mining camps sprang up in the area. The first, Biedell, appeared in 1881 and 1000 men were mining by 1883; the second sprang up in 1886 and was known as El Carnero (GeoZone, 2011).  The latter area was producing from “lead carbonate” (BLM information sign), a mineral I presume is cerussite (PbCO3).  
   
In the 1940’s mining evidently returned to Crystal Hill in the form of the Crystal Hill Mining Company (BLM information sign); however, I was unable to locate additional information about this later activity.

Voynick (1994) noted that “exploration geologists returned to crystal Hill in the late 1970’s, delineating a large, low-grade zone of disseminated gold near the top of the hill.  The Crystal Hill Mining Company developed an open-cut heap leach mine recovering 30,000 troy ounces of gold in four years”.  In2009? “stimulus funding” allowed the BLM to reclaim, at least partially, the old mine.  BLM now allows access on the reclaimed area but warns that the main pit is off limits and on private land.   
  
Rockhounds appreciate Crystal Hill for the occurrence of terminated amethyst and quartz crystals.  So, in summer 2010 I was headed to Alamosa for a BLM meeting and decided to take a side trip to Crystal Hill with my crack hammer in tow.  I found the appropriate brecciated rocks in the cliff associated with the reclaimed mine but was rather unsuccessful.  I then begin to pound on large boulders that were scattered around the area and finally was able to locate some vugs.  Many contained very nice, but rather small, slender terminated quartz crystals.  However, I did notice the telltale violet color of an amethyst crystal in one vug.  I brought the enclosing rock home and cleaned it with water, soap and muratic acid and was able to isolate a very nice crystal.

Terminated crystal of amethyst projecting from vug. 


REFERENCES CITED 

GeoZone, 2011, The Lost Mine of Saguache Creek: www.thegeozone.com/treasure/colorado/tales/co014b.jsp#prospecting

Voynick, S. M., 1994, Colorado Rockhounding: Missoula, Mountain Press Publishing Company.