Image of whale baleen (click to see image)
Saturday, August 17, 2013
Whale Baleen Fossil
Image of whale baleen (click to see image)
Sunday, August 4, 2013
Several fossils found at the beach
Notice the square peg shape.
I'm not a paleontologist or geologist, I just collect. I find the fossils and rocks sculptural and they all have a connection to the earth and to living.
I'm not a paleontologist or geologist, I just collect. I find the fossils and rocks sculptural and they all have a connection to the earth and to living.
I wish I knew what this was!
Some rocks...
I found this rock in the Eastern Sierras:
I was so certain this rock was a meteorite, a chondrite! I thought I spotted chondrules with my magnifying glass. I researched on the internet and did the tests experts recommend before submitting a tiny piece to a meteorite specialist. I was so 100% certain! Only to be disappointed by the letter back saying it was probably a meta-volcanic rock. Meta being that it had changed it's properties because of heat. I still think it is a meteorite. It looks so similar to the meteorites on display at Griffith Park Observatory and in this link: http://www.meteorite-pictures.org/Chondrite-Meteorite-Pictures/
I was so certain this rock was a meteorite, a chondrite! I thought I spotted chondrules with my magnifying glass. I researched on the internet and did the tests experts recommend before submitting a tiny piece to a meteorite specialist. I was so 100% certain! Only to be disappointed by the letter back saying it was probably a meta-volcanic rock. Meta being that it had changed it's properties because of heat. I still think it is a meteorite. It looks so similar to the meteorites on display at Griffith Park Observatory and in this link: http://www.meteorite-pictures.org/Chondrite-Meteorite-Pictures/
Close up using the Zoomy showing sand size spheres all clustered together. I found the rock among ryholite tuff. |
One person's trash is another's treasure...
The rain and ground squirrels usually turn up new trash treasures for me to find. They look like ordinary rocks, but with closer inspection one can spot human workings of the stone. Local basalt and possibly imported volcanic rock.
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