strange material I.D. please

birdpointgriswold

Hero Member
May 23, 2012
889
228
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
1
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I'm in NC and never in all my hunting seen anything like this before.. I know some of you know your material very well and would appreciate the thoughts.. it seems to have a little flaking on one side but doubt its anything. Thanks for your time guys

ForumRunner_20121111_190649.png



ForumRunner_20121111_190709.png



ForumRunner_20121111_190732.png



ForumRunner_20121111_190746.png
 

Upvote 0
You alredy got my opinion..lets see what happens.
 

I don't know but if I were to dare to take a wild guess and understand that this a guess.......Fossilized tree sap? :dontknow:
 

GaRebel1861 said:
I don't know but if I were to dare to take a wild guess and understand that this a guess.......Fossilized tree sap? :dontknow:

Jurassic park!
 

Kidding aside..I think its agatized wood. A super material for knapping..and beautiful to boot.
 

He is close.

Since you said that, you have me really wondering what it is. I guessed that because of the lines in it which made me think of the oozing of pine sap that fossilized. I'll follow and see what it is.
 

I was going to say pet wood because of it's transparency and visible lines at the core of the stone. Ill have to look it up. It's not impossible to find rubies, emeralds, gold, silver and I have been told low grade diamonds here. Cool find!!
 

Looks like sunstone to me.Here's some that I have that sure looks close.
Take Care,
Pete,:hello:
 

Attachments

  • 003.JPG
    003.JPG
    39.3 KB · Views: 99
  • 002.JPG
    002.JPG
    40.3 KB · Views: 90
  • 001.JPG
    001.JPG
    45 KB · Views: 109
  • 004.JPG
    004.JPG
    91.9 KB · Views: 98
Last edited:
I've heard of sunstone in Oregon but never in the Carolina's. Where did you get yours?
 

I've heard of sunstone in Oregon but never in the Carolina's. Where did you get yours?

Mine came from here in N.C.,................................

Sunstone was not common until recently. Previously the best-known locality being Tvedestrand, near Arendal, in south Norway, where masses of the sunstone occur embedded in a vein of quartz running through gneiss. Due to the discovery of large deposits in Oregon, Sunstone is now readily available.
Other locations include near Lake Baikal in Siberia, and several United States localities—notably at Middletown Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, Lakeview, Oregon, and Statesville, North Carolina.
The "orthoclase sunstone" variant has been found near Crown Point and at several other localities in New York, as also at Glen Riddle in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, and at Amelia Courthouse, Amelia County, Virginia.
Sunstone is also found in Pleistocene basalt flows at Sunstone Knoll in Millard County, Utah
 

Woah .. Take it your into rocks and gems. I would still have to say Your sunstone looks alot like agatized wood. And I don't see lines in the sunstone.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top