Idaho!
RyansRocks
- 26 / 200
1
Agate Cut!
0:59
2
Brecciated Jasper w/Chalcedony!
0:53
3
Petrified Bark Cut!
0:58
4
Grey dendrites!
0:56
5
Cuttin' the Basalt Ball!
0:58
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Black plume!
0:58
7
Jumpin' Jasper!
0:58
8
Hot mess!
0:39
9
Agate Cut!
0:59
10
Chalcedony glow!
0:20
11
Botryoidal Chalcedony n' Jasper Glow!
0:28
12
Broken Thunderegg Cluster!
0:35
13
Sommer Camp Rd area!
0:43
14
Do you see the Cross?
0:34
15
Chalcedony n' Quartz Veins!
0:36
16
Half a thunderegg!
0:52
17
Brecciated Jasper!
0:40
18
Thunderegg Cluster w Common Opal!
0:41
19
Red Thunderegg Shard!
0:42
20
Iron rich formation!
0:40
21
Jasper!
0:25
22
Huntin' near the Gulch!
0:57
23
Opalene Gulch Area!
0:58
24
Huntin' the Gulch!
1:30
25
Beautiful day coming back from the Gulch!
2:57
Petrified wood!
0:30
27
A Cold Lake Lowell Rockhunt!
1:07
28
Lake Lowell Rockhunt?
1:56
29
Plume botryoidal chalcedony nugget!
3:03
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Plume slice!
2:03
31
Botryoidal slice!
2:03
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Plume agate inspection!
4:32
33
Plume flow!
2:13
34
Botryoidal Chalcedony Nugget!
1:51
35
Salmon Falls Creek Reservoir!
0:46
36
Playing with color!
0:50
37
Plume chunk glow!
1:13
38
Red dot glow slice!
0:49
39
Glow plume!
1:07
40
Carnelean Glow!
0:52
41
Jasper glow!
1:05
42
Glow Plume!
0:51
43
Thundercup glow!
0:53
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Thunderegg glow!
0:50
45
Plume chunk glow!
0:52
46
Slab o' Plume Glow!
1:03
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Glow chunk!
0:52
48
Plume agate glow!
0:54
49
Rabbit Springs Lava Flow!
0:49
50
Broken Geodes & Thundereggs!
1:49
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Whole Thundereggs from Rabbit Springs Lava Flow!
1:18
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Thunderegg Nest!
0:57
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Snake River Canyon! (near the Evel Knieval jump)
0:23
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The green caught my eye!
0:33
55
Square geode!
0:33
56
Big ol' chunk!
0:41
57
Beautiful dark opal!
0:31
58
Hot Botryoidal Mess!
0:51
59
Plume agate!
0:37
60
A Bit o' Honey Plume Agate!
0:35
61
Brecciated jasper!
0:33
62
Plume agate!
0:51
63
Alien egg!
0:40
64
Half of a geode!
0:36
65
It's curved!
0:39
66
Plume Agate!
0:36
67
Botryoidal formations!
0:32
68
Carnelian sandwich!
0:30
69
Broken geode!
0:33
70
This half survived Monther Nature!
0:30
71
Plume agate!
0:54
72
Beautiful Colors!
0:40
73
Jasper, Chalcedony, Opal & ???
0:52
74
Cool Banding!
0:40
75
Rockhunting at Graveyard Point!
1:06
76
Broken nodule!
0:30
77
Big Red!
0:29
78
Nodule with crystals!
0:30
79
Chalcedony or Opal!?
0:31
80
Quartz Nugget!
0:31
81
Crushed Thunderegg!
0:40
82
Tri-cluster of Thundereggs!
0:46
83
Big Green!
0:21
84
Chalcedony!
0:24
85
Boise River Rockhunting!
0:21
86
Lava Rock!
0:21
87
Carmel Chalcedony Nugget!
0:34
88
Cracked Up Quartz!
0:40
89
Cool Nodule!
0:38
90
Smooth as Glass!
0:34
91
Did you see the little X?
0:34
92
Pink Quartz!
0:37
93
Crisscross Iron Stained Quartz!
0:35
94
Tiny Thundereggs!
1:03
95
Clear/White Banding!
1:02
96
Circular Formation!
1:16
97
What's inside this Thunderegg?!?
1:14
98
Is it a Thunderegg?
0:54
99
Cross section cut!
1:02
100
Beautiful Colors!
1:09
101
Pink n' White Inside!
1:06
102
Alien Egg!
0:14
103
There's this!
0:21
104
Love the orange/yellow!
0:17
105
Interesting!
0:21
106
Chocolate!
0:26
107
Quartz and...
0:25
108
Cool Staining Pattern!
0:23
109
Beautiful Colors!
0:28
110
Now that's a big gash!
0:34
111
One 4 cuttin'!
0:35
112
This one got a swirley!
0:27
113
X marks the spot!
0:30
114
Beautiful Opal Glow!
0:37
117
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The Orb!
0:32
121
122
Honeycomb Nodule!?
0:21
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White Chalcedony!
0:26
126
Up Crane Creek!
0:25
127
Chunk of colors!
0:21
128
Red nodule of______?
0:14
129
Blood red!
0:16
130
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Colorful banding!
0:25
132
Jasper? Chalcedony?
0:33
133
Asteroid!?!?
0:24
134
Honeycomb chunk!
0:31
135
Nice cut!
0:40
136
Agate nodule!
0:19
137
One to cut!
0:25
138
White botryoidal chalcedony?
0:22
139
Got a little cave in it!
0:27
140
Orangey!
0:20
141
Interesting form!
0:17
142
Agate w/Orange Chalcedony!
0:25
143
Smooth Shard!
0:22
144
Cool Banding!
0:24
145
Spud 2!
0:20
146
Nice Glow!
0:37
147
Half Glow!
0:37
148
Banded Glow!
0:33
149
Bright White!
0:54
150
Glow Blob!
0:54
151
Quartz and ?
0:16
152
Lil' bit of opal!
0:19
153
Should be a pretty glow! Stay tuned!
0:19
154
Yella Quartzite!
0:18
155
Beautiful Quartz!
0:16
156
Did you catch the silver flakes?
0:21
157
No idea!
0:25
158
Bright Orange Jasper Nodule!
0:20
159
Beautiful Jasper!
0:24
160
Layers!
0:22
161
Jasper Banding!
0:21
162
Colorful!
0:28
163
Opal!
0:27
164
Purple & Yellow Jasper!
0:27
165
Opal or Chalcedony?
0:24
166
Chalcedony & Jasper!
0:30
167
Part of a Thunderegg!?
0:35
168
Spud 3!
0:29
169
Beautiful Quartz!
0:35
170
Beautiful Yellow Quartz!
0:23
171
Jasper Nodule?
0:28
172
Agate Stone w/Yellow Chalcedony!
0:25
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Quartz Shard!
0:27
174
Grey Quartz!
0:25
175
Rockhounding at Lucky Peak Reservoir!
0:16
176
Agate Nodule!
0:27
177
Beautiful Quartz!
0:34
178
Blue/Grey Quartzite!
0:27
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Quartz Nugget!
0:26
180
Agate Nodule!
0:30
181
Yellow Chalcedony!
0:46
182
White Quartz Shard!
0:52
183
Beautiful Yellow Quartz!
0:50
184
Coral Fossil!
0:29
185
Petroskey stone?
0:31
186
Dinosaur Egg!
0:35
188
Pink!
0:29
189
Mish Mash of Agate!
0:33
190
Yellow & White Chalcedony!
0:33
191
Agate Nodule w/Chalcedony!
0:39
192
Colorful Jasper!
0:36
193
Yellow/Green Jasper!
0:33
194
Contrasting colors!
0:39
195
Sandwich o' Chalcedony!
0:36
196
Colorful Jasper!
0:40
197
Chalcedony Sqared!
0:47
198
Chalcedony Blob!
0:31
199
Stunning Colors!
0:37
200
Pinks & Reds!
0:38

Petrified wood!

14 days ago
49

Petrified wood is a type of fossil where the organic materials of a tree or tree-like plant have been replaced by minerals, preserving the original structure of the wood in stone form. Here are some key details about petrified wood:

Formation: The process of petrifaction involves several steps:
Burial: The wood must be buried quickly in sediment, usually in environments like river floodplains or volcanic ash deposits, to prevent decay.
Mineralization: Groundwater rich in dissolved minerals, primarily silica (but can also include iron, manganese, or other minerals), seeps into the wood. Over time, the minerals precipitate out of the water and replace the organic material cell by cell, effectively turning the wood into stone while maintaining its original structure.
Recrystallization: The silica often recrystallizes into quartz, preserving the cellular structure of the wood in fine detail.
Composition: While the primary mineral in petrified wood is often quartz, other minerals like calcite, pyrite, or oxides of iron and manganese can also be involved, contributing to the variety of colors seen in petrified wood.
Texture: Petrified wood retains the texture of the original wood, with growth rings, knots, and even bark sometimes visible. The texture can range from fine-grained to coarse, depending on the degree of mineral replacement and the type of wood.
Color: The color of petrified wood varies widely based on the minerals involved in the replacement process:
Silica: Usually results in white, gray, or clear petrified wood.
Iron Oxides: Can give shades of red, yellow, or brown.
Manganese Oxides: Often produce black or dark brown colors.
Copper Compounds: Can result in green or blue hues.
Uses:
Decorative: Petrified wood is popular in home decor, used for making furniture, tabletops, bookends, and as display pieces due to its unique beauty and historical significance.
Jewelry: Slices or small pieces of petrified wood can be polished and used in jewelry, especially when colorful or with interesting patterns.
Scientific Study: It's valuable in paleobotany for understanding ancient forests, plant evolution, and the environmental conditions of the past.
Geological Significance: Petrified wood provides a window into ancient ecosystems, showing what types of vegetation existed millions of years ago. It's also a record of geological processes like volcanic activity, flooding, or changes in river courses that led to the burial and preservation of the wood.

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