Saturday, February 28, 2026

A SNAPSHOT OF 22ND STREET AND KINO IN TUCSON

 

 Sunset in the desert.

Two of the really large venues that seem to have something for all interested buyers are the 22nd Street Show with about 337 vendors, ~300+ in a single LONG tent, and the Kino Show along south I 10. The latter venue has 220 vendors situated in two large tents and several smaller open shelters. It is just difficult to explain how much “stuff” these vendors have “for sale.” Both venues sell items ranging from mineral “hand specimens’ (few micromounts and mostly rather common minerals) to brass bells and cups to southwestern style pottery to fox pelts to really large amethyst cathedrals to vertebrate  fossils (both real and mostly fake) to expensive gemstone rings and cheap jewelry baubles to everything in between, and also much material seemingly unrelated to the mineral realm.

 

The 22nd Street Show is essentially housed in one LONG tent. Notice parked cars for scale.

With a crowd of shoppers, one really cannot see the far end of the tent.

Impressive vertebrate fossils. Quite respective teeth of a large reptile could make short work of me!

If not poked full of holes by a large toothy predator in the Mesozoic, then watch out for a charging, scary looking Wooly Rhinoceros in the Pleistocene Ice Age.

Actually a nice beaded dinosaur seems cuter and more friendly.

Cures for a variety of ailments that are unavailable in your local drug store.

 

Fifteen bucks for celestine geodes.

A slab (micrite, tiny carbonate crystals of aragonite or calcite) containing fish from the Green River Formation near Kemmerer, Wyoming.

During about a six-million-year time span (~50 Ma) fish, and a large variety of animals and plants, inhabited the waters of a large subtropical lake system centered around the Unita Mountains in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming. Generally known as the Green River Lake System, intermontane basins created by the Laramide Orogeny contained three major lakes: Lake Unita in the Piceance and Unita Basins in Utah and Colorado; Fossil Lake in the Fossil Basin of Wyoming; and Lake Gosiute in the Green River and Bridger Basins of Wyoming. At times, seemingly interconnected, the lakes were home to a variety of bony fish whose remains are displayed in museums, rock/mineral shops, and art galleries around the world; however, Fossil Lake, the smallest of the lakes in the System, seems to have the richest flora and fauna. The famous Fossil Butte National Monument is located in Fossil Basin. Several decades ago I spent much time in Fossil Basin working on my dissertation. I had discovered a vertebrate fauna in the Fowkes Formation, a Bridger Formation equivalent, that was part of the end cycle of the Lakes System.  


 

It seems that only a few booths had good displays of minerals that caught my eye; Labradorite was one. Note the $1100 price tag on a single specimen.

Kunzite from Afghanistan at $3 gram. Must be a newer find as I noticed similar displays at perhaps 12 other vendors.

How about a nice beaded crab?

And speaking of beads---for sale everywhere.

After a short time most of the jewelry venues look the same!

What we have here is a failure to state the truth---yep a dye job.

 



  

The Kino Show is the “master” of outdoor shows with a couple of large tents thrown in.

Could not get a smile out of me with these non-appealing rocks.

 

Trade a fox skin for a Benjamin?

       

My five buck minerals: fluorite from Quebec, Canada, and  zeolites from the Deccan Traps in India. Each hand size.

 

Take a marble size lapis, $2, from Afghanistan.

 

An evening off to attend the University of Arizona softball game.

 

Every evening from the patio watching the last rays of the sun strike the Catalina Mountains.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

MICROMOUNTS & PERKY BOXES: MINERAL CITY

 


As I noted in a 2024 posting: If Tucson Show attendees came down to Arizona to see minerals, all sorts of minerals, beautiful minerals from micros to cabinet, no brass bells and other do-dads, but just great minerals, then Mineral City is the place to go.  Located north of downtown along main drag Oracle Road with an address on Lester, Mineral City was like the Phoenix rising from the ashes. The brainchild of Graham Sutton, Mineral City has expanded, in seven short years, from “nothing in an empty lot, to a series of warehouse-like buildings holding, in 2026, over 2000 mineral dealers in 14 different buildings. These buildings are single stories and each with one or two central hallways supporting individual rooms on either side. Dealers may “decorate” as desired with chairs, cases of all sorts, coffee pots, a wine decanter or two, and throw in good conversations. Building D offers The Stope, a mining themed relaxation room complete with wine, coffee, beer, displays and conversation with Chric DeStafano holding down the home of Mineralogical Record. 

Each year an artist is selected to to construct (paint) a mural on the exterior wall of a MinCity building.

 

 As advertisements note: Mineral City is a premier location for collectors focusing on rocks and minerals rather than jewelry or fossils. It took me two days just to wander the hallways and check out the different dealers and revisit acquaintances such as Phillip Persson, a “fine minerals” dealer from the Denver area and Joe Dorris, he of Lake George amazonite fame, from Colorado Springs.

Phillip Persson a "fine and rare" mineral dealer takes five in his MinCity warehouse shop.

 

A hallway with shops in one of the MinCity warehouses.

 

One of the MinCity dealers, maybe Zac Bell, had a beautiful faceted marcasite included calcite from the Elmwood Mine in Tennessee.

Mineral City is also home of two of my favorite “micromounts/perky box” dealers. The team of Petr Sztacho and Jaroslav Hyril are from the Czech Republic, and their hundreds of Perky Boxes have a fine selection of European minerals. I enjoy visiting with them about Czech mines, geography, and kolaches. A couple of buildings away is Shannon family Minerals where Michael Shannon holds court and continues the legacy of his father David Shannon. Shannon has an extra-large space and hence is able to offer a large variety of hand specimens as well as hundreds of perky boxes. Two years ago he purchased the micromount inventory of the well-known dealer from Indiana, Jim Daly (now deceased). Although Shannon has sold thousands of boxes from the Daly collection (mostly mounted by Art Smith), several hundred/thousand remain. In addition, collections from the U.S. western states offer a wide variety of minerals from several mines that fit into the budget of “frugal collectors” like me. Mineral collectors could easily spend all week at Mineral City.

Take your choice of micromounts from Arkansas--10 bucks each.
Micromounts for all at Shannon's.

Numerous boxes of larger hand specimens--many full of microminerals waiting for prep. 

 

 Take your choice Perky Boxes or hand specimens. 

I did manage to leave the shows with a few parky boxes that will allow me to spend many pleasant days sequestered in my office. Descriptions will appear in this Blog at some time in the "future!"


Nickeline:  Nickel arsenide         Cryolite:  Sodium-aluminum fluoride

Akinite:  Lead-copper-bismuth sulfide       Sonoraite:  Hydroxyl iron tellurite

Turquoise: Hydrous Cu & Al phosphate   Sampleite: Hydrated sodium-calcite-copper phosphate

Ullmannite: Nickle-antimony sulfide    Wherryite:  Barium carbonate 

Krohnkite: Hydrated sodium-copper sulfate   Brochantite:   Hydrated copper sulfate

Jacobsite: Manganese iron oxide   Carbonate cyanotrichite: Hydrated Cu-Al carbonate

Juangodoyite: Sodium-copper carbonate  Devilline: Ca-Cu sulfate hydroxide hydrate

Teallite: lead-tin sulfate  Vesignieite: Copper-orthovanadate hydroxide

Chromite:  Iron-chromium oxide  Effenbergerite: Barium-copper silicate

Arsenic: Elemental native arsenic Lueshite:  Potassium-aluminum silicate

Eglestonite: Mercury oxychloride  Tsumcorite: Hydrated lead-zinc-iron arsenate

Lavendulan: Sodium calcium copper chlor-arsenate hydrate

Connellite & Malachite: Hydrous copper chlor-sulfate & Copper carbonate hydroxide


 And I leave you with the symbol of the Arizona desert--sunset with the saguaros.