Help identifying artifact

buckybeaver

Newbie
Aug 10, 2020
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Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting

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antmike915

Silver Member
Apr 20, 2020
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SW Georgia
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I believe it too be natural, mother nature is a artist sometimes. I would've brought it home too.
 

IMAUDIGGER

Silver Member
Mar 16, 2016
3,400
5,194
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If it was used as a hammer stone, it would show some use wear on what would be the working end.
What’s that end look like? Smooth like the rest of the stone?

Neat looking rock. Kind of looks like something ate part of a potato.
That’s how I would display it...with a fur mouse laying by it with an engorged stomach.

Meteorite?
 

Last edited:
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buckybeaver

Newbie
Aug 10, 2020
2
4
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
If it was used as a hammer stone, it would show some use wear on what would be the working end.
What’s that end look like? Smooth like the rest of the stone?

Neat looking rock. Kind of looks like something ate part of a potato.
That’s how I would display it...with a fur mouse laying by it with an engorged stomach.

Meteorite?

Thank you for the information.Yes its smooth all over, It will still be a cool rock for my desk.
 

Back-of-the-boat

Gold Member
Apr 18, 2013
6,885
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California
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AT GOLD/Garrett /C.Scope cs4PI/Garrett(carrot) pro pointer/ 5x8 double d coil and sniper coil/Lesche digger/Lesche "T" handle shovel.
Primary Interest:
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Drill a hole in the bottom and turn that into your gearshifter in your car.
 

RGINN

Gold Member
Oct 16, 2007
8,608
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Summit County, CO
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Natural but very cool.
 

Charl

Silver Member
Jan 19, 2012
3,053
4,680
Rhode Island
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
What a cool rock. It would have started its life as a rock, as part of a thick formation, even thousands of feet thick, in the case of some formations. Because Michigan was glaciated, its smoothness might suggest it was a polished glacial cobble at one time. Still is. The gap might be because there was a softer, more weather prone type of rock filling that void, and what’s called differential weathering weathered it away from the more resistant parts of the stone, leaving you with a nice conversation piece.
 

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