The 22nd Street Show consists of a very
large tent-like structure that contains in excess of 100 individual
vendors. Most of these sellers have
large “booths” containing several tables—more “big-time” vendors rather than “mom
and pop” operations. I spent nearly the
entire day perusing rocks, minerals, fossils, beads, equipment, and a wide
variety of “lots of things related to our hobby.” I particularly enjoyed some fabulous dinosaur
casts made available by Triebold Paleontology headquartered in Woodland Park,
Colorado. Triebold also operates a
museum known as the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource. If readers might be traveling through
Woodland Park, take a break and visit this nifty museum.
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Triebold Paleontology: A "bone-headed" dinosaur. |
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Triebold Paleontology: White River Group mammals from the South Dakota (maybe Nebraska) badlands. |
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Triebold Paleontology: Daspletosaurus, a tyrannosaur collected from the Late Cretaceous Judith River Formation, Montana. |
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Ceratopsian dinosaur of Late Cretaceous age. Note the horn and frill in the rear of skull. |
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Triebold Paleontology: Saurodon, a fish collected from the Niobrara Formation (Chalk Beds), western Kansas. Note the elongated predentary bone (lower jaw). |
The 22nd Street venue also holds some of
the “stars” associated with the TV show The
Prospectors. Amanda and Travis
Anderson had a quite large venue selling mostly Pikes Pikes and Mt. Antero
specimens. The Busey family was present and Dwayne Hall. All seemed to be busy
signing autographs on posters.
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Dwayne Hall of The Prospectors holds court. |
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Travis and Amanda Anderson and their booth; a wide variety of Pikes Peak minerals for sale. |
A couple of other vendors had large displays of
Green River, Wyoming, fish and some beautiful palm fronds. There was a nice display (and sale) of Solenhofen (Germany) fossils. Opal was in abundance and some of the cuts
were really nice, but quite expensive.
Numerous jewelry vendors were up and running with prices ranging from
$10 earrings or pendants to blue sapphire rings selling for five figures. It was just a nice day wandering around and
sometimes talking to friendly vendors.
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These two skulls show a new use for Arkansas quartz crystals! |
I ran onto a vendor selling specimens of red ruby
and pink-red spinel and decided I really need one of each-$5 per specimen. Their colors contrast nicely with the white
marble matrix. From what the vendor told
me, all of his gems come from Pakistan in an area named the Hunza Valley The
gem deposit are located in rocks (metamorphic ocean platform carbonates) that
were modified when proto-India banged into the Asian continent during the
Himalayan mountain building events.
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A nice modified octahedron crystal of ruby from the Hunza Valley in Pakistan. I could not pick up the correct color in this photomicrograph; however, it is a nice "ruby red." Front width, across the base, is ~5 mm. |
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Photomicrograph of dark pink spinel em-placed in white marble with a smaller crystal of gold-brown phlogopite. Width of larger crystal ~5 mm. |
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Photomicrograph, pink specimen of spinel. Length (up-down) ~ 1 cm. |
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Photomicrograph, small crystal of spinel with faces while large specimen is "massive." Length of small crystal ~2 mm. |
A previous Blog (11/7/12) detailed information about ruby
and spinel.
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