G Freeman
Sr. Member
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2013
- Messages
- 476
- Reaction score
- 230
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Southwest Virginia
- Detector(s) used
- Fisher Gold Bug.
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Last edited:
Rprimm,
Amelia County is home to many crystal finds, especially Aquamarine. Those mica deposits would be an excellent place to hunt. The famous Morefield Mine has a great host pegmatite zone. Here is a list of minerals for that location and you can click on the box at the top of the page that says "Photos" for photos of specimens from that area.
Amelia Co., Virginia, USA
Hope this helps and you could find some serious specimens in that area! -Luke
Awesome! Man that's a lot of different rocks, I guess I'll just keep anything that looks cool and ask y'all about it... Do I have to dig to a certain depth before I can find certain rocks or is it different everywhere? Would I be correct in thinking that it's different everywhere because of layers being different, erosion, etc.? Thanks for the help! I'm going to try to get out there today
Hey G Freeman, Where are you finding this in Virginia? And is it in a creek, or are you just digging anywhere?
My family has some property in Amelia county and I'm just trying to figure out if we have anything cool that I could dig for. The property has some flat land, big hills, a swamp, a few streams that flow into a decent sized creek. Some places there are lots of mountain rocks (don't know what else to call them, being in Virginia you should know what "mountain rocks" I'm talking about)... Also some places with red dirt and lots of mica. It's pretty diverse... Anyway, I'd appreciate any advice or tips you have for me for where I could start, thanks
GFree that resembles the rock I'm working. A semi-relative brought me a batch from NM.
I'm just using a dremel which easily facets the green stone. Held to sunlight a beautiful
blue translucent to transparent hue. Don't know how to post photos so I'm hoping this
description will prompt an evaluation. The rocks I have are filled with these from small
to 1-2 inch specimens.
Can we see a pic of it? This is a really cool thread! Maybe what you have there is that rare g-freemanite!Yakker
Well BB and Yakker this is the latest little crystal I found. SG is 3.33 but anyway it is probably quartz too. Haven't got it checked out yet so cant say for sure but got some sun this morning and hope yall can see the bluegreen in it. The bluegreen has such a shine to it if it is turned a certain way that my camera wont take that.View attachment 1099612View attachment 1099613View attachment 1099614View attachment 1099615
You're going to make it a habit of finding unusual specimens, aren't you? lol![]()
That would be a pretty good habit BB if I can just keep it up. If you find out about the bluegreen in the crystals I might jut pitch a tent at the dig site and dig more. LOL. The more I study it the more it reminds me of Aquamarine. But I could be wrong.
That would be alright with me for you to send them Flick420 and see what he says and ask him if the specific gravity is higher than quartz should be with that in the crystals. I looked that up and in my study they said ajoite was 3 and a half on Mohs scale of hardness and this stuff I got is at least as hard as quartz if not harder.Get back to me. Thanks a lot.What they both reminded me of when i saw them was "ajoite in quartz" if you google that your specimens look like low grade versions of those. The color is not the same but vary similar. I dont know what the coloring could be you would have to get it tested to see what its made up of. I know of someone who sells lots of quartz crystals i could send him a picture if you'd like and see what he says about them.
View attachment 1102149Here's some mica I found fifteen feet past my property! I was kind of mad, on the drive out I found some bigger chunks washing out of the drainage ditch (also not on my property!) What do y'all think G Freeman and BurntBear? Is this kind of mica you were saying would be a good place to start?