Strange Rock????

sixshooter

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Location
Ridgecres, Ca
Detector(s) used
Whites Spectrum Eagle and Minelab GP 3000
Maybe someone can help me identify this rock I found. I was detecting in the Southern Ca high desert near Randsburg. It gave me a super hard signal. I thought maybe a "hotrock", but it is NOT magnetic! I ground a portion of it off and it is silver/black metallic looking (shiny spot in the picture). Could it be Silver?? Nickle?? Platinum?? Meteorite?? Please help.
Thanks
 

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Would have to say not a Meteorite, much too angular. Aside from that I have no idea.

N
 

I found a rock similar to that in Arizona while gold hunting near payson 4 years ago.Looks like magnetite to me. If it has any reddish spots in the rock , It is definite magnetite/hematite, an iron ore. A rock shop might still give you some bucks for it so don't throw it out. It doesn't look right for a meteorite.
-tom
 

tvanwho said:
I found a rock similar to that in Arizona while gold hunting near payson 4 years ago.Looks like magnetite to me.
-tom

Magnetite is magnetic, and he said it isn't magnetic.
 

SPHALERIT (Zn, Fe)S, Zinc Iron Sulfide and when the iron is not present, makes some really cool crystals.
In a nut shell, High grade zinc ore.... I would look for the Limonite deposit that spit it out, Normally the strata will go oxidized limonite(micron gold)/sphalerit cap and decent gold at the bottom of the cap at the sheer zone.

This is going by the pic, Silver is a possible contender as well as some Pyrites.
 

It sure looks "volcanic" in orgin!
AND!
HAY!
It could be a Type of Meteorite ::)
You know, the kind blown out of a volcano,
A!
Volcanic Bomb? :o
Any volcanos in the general area (w/in 10-20 miles?)
 

Sphalerite(?) has a red/ reddish yellow streak and also, when struck, has a sulfur odor. If it is soft, it could be molybdenum or it could be psilominane(?)
 

Couldn't you simply measure the specific gravity of the "rock" and find out what it is?
 

Try manganese. A water fused lump of minerals in nodes found in deserts and often confused with meteorites.

Aufinder01
 

if you cannot figure it out, send it to me i could take it to work and have one of the guys shoot it with a analizer, we got it for checking weld compositions, a had a piece that had me stumped, that he tested and it was 98% zinc, which had a grey and white exterior, and shined up nice, as your piece does
 

I think it looks like Biotite that is a common phyllosilicate mineral within the mica group.......

it is an indicator rock when looking for gold....


db
 

Did you ever find out what your rock was? Try a scratch test. If it scratches red its probably hematite. Jimmygoat
 

AuExplorer said:
SPHALERIT (Zn, Fe)S, Zinc Iron Sulfide and when the iron is not present, makes some really cool crystals.
In a nut shell, High grade zinc ore.... I would look for the Limonite deposit that spit it out, Normally the strata will go oxidized limonite(micron gold)/sphalerit cap and decent gold at the bottom of the cap at the sheer zone.

This is going by the pic, Silver is a possible contender as well as some Pyrites.
Agree! :icon_thumleft:
 

DanB said:
I think it looks like Biotite that is a common phyllosilicate mineral within the mica group.......

it is an indicator rock when looking for gold....


db

Anyone else have more info on this statement? I know where there is a good bit of Biotite and quartz not far from my house, but I sure haven't found any gold there, yet anyway.

As to the rock, pictured; I am sorry I don't know enough about it to offer any feedback.
 

Astrobouncer said:
DanB said:
I think it looks like Biotite that is a common phyllosilicate mineral within the mica group.......

it is an indicator rock when looking for gold....


db

Anyone else have more info on this statement? I know where there is a good bit of Biotite and quartz not far from my house, but I sure haven't found any gold there, yet anyway.

As to the rock, pictured; I am sorry I don't know enough about it to offer any feedback.

Nah, Biotite has nothing to do with gold..
Except it's very common and as such could be found with gold...
Most/all Granite consist partly of Biotite..
But Biotite doesn't have a metallic surface, hence this is not Biotite!

Hematite is a possibility.. Makes a reddish streak against a unglazed piece of porcelain. :)
 

like aufinder said it does favor manganese,manganese sometimes coats gold nuggets
in s.calif from blythe to the chocolate mtns and near the colorado river.try a super magnet on it.
 

Sixshooter,
I have friends at the Kennedy Space Center that can give you the definitive proof of type. They do that stuff for a living. When I worked there, I took a friend's "meteaorite" in only to find it was a very pure piece of chrome slag! Life went on that day with no further "fools witw there rocks
 

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