|
Work site shows rock walls with slight void between contrasting pegmatite walls |
It’s been rather hot and dry lately and motivation to go out
and dig crystals has ebbed some since the cooler spring weather has
passed. June is usually our warmest
month with light winds, few clouds and scorching temperatures. Colorado is very dry due to less than normal
winter snows and higher than normal temperatures. Snowpack on Pikes Peak which normally last
into August was gone by mid June. Forest fires will be a big problem again this
year until the summer monsoons raise humidity and moisture. Anytime it hits 80F
in our digging areas up at Lake George, CO it seems very warm to me. Maybe I’m just getting older and the heat is
getting to me more quickly. I usually seek out shady spots to dig this time of
year.
My digging partner Bob decided it was time for us to hit an area we had
worked some before and found lots of pegmatites but very few well-formed
crystals. Bob mentioned we needed to
find a pocket and call it the Summer Solstice pocket so that is what we
did. I returned to a spot I had dug
before and Bob dug up the hill from me.
I had been finding pale colored amazonite but most were not euhedral
crystals but partially encased in the pegmatite. Every once in a while I could take a chunk of
quartz with an embedded microcline in it and tap the quartz freeing the
microcline. As I continued to dig along the pegmatite I noticed some nicer
crystals in the dirt above the pegmatite and guessed there was another
pegmatite shedding better formed amazonite crystals up the hill. I began digging up the hill following the
float amazonite crystals. As the crystals became more numerous I eventually dug
into the pegmatite shedding the amazonite.
While I found a pocket with this pegmatite there were more amazonite
crystals in the dirt below the pocket (float) than actually in the pocket. I would say there were about 50 or 60
crystals but only a handful were undamaged and collectible. I also found a few amazonite associated with
goethite.
|
Goethite crystals were the real prize of this dig. 3" specimen |
While these amazonite crystals were a bit better formed they were quite
pale. I continued digging along this new
pegmatite and found a softer area between a quartz portion of the pegmatite and
a predominately feldspar wall. I
continued to break up the quartz seam and dig out the softer feldspar. As my hammer banged and pick axe clanged
through the rock the site of sparks along with the smell of burned rock leads
me to believe I will soon need a new rock hammer and pick axe tips. As I moved
along the pegmatite I finally discovered another small pocket. As I probed the pocket with a long handled
screwdriver I began to unearth goethite along with amazonite. This pocket, about 3 feet down, contained a
little stronger colored amazonite (though still pale in my mind) along with
numerous goethite sprays. There was more goethite than amazonite. I also found one clear fluorite and one smoky
quartz crystal. I pulled out 25 pieces
of goethite ranging from 1-3” across many with bow-tie like sprays of goethite
needles. I called my digging partner
over and he got a kick out of watching me pull out goethite sprays. I had nicknamed Bob the "Goethite King" last
year and while I was nowhere near to assuming his title I did find enough
goethite to fill a flat. As I continued
along the pegmatite a general void appeared between the vertical pegmatite on
my left and a more quartzy pegmatite on my right. It was at the intersection of these two
formations that the goethite had settled/formed in along with some amazonite. I would call most of this a seam of crystals
as opposed to a pocket but whatever you want to call it, it was challenging to
remove hundreds of pounds of rock and rewarding to get a few crystals out. Now
if there is anyone out there who wants goethite at $200 a piece as seen on the internet--let me know. :-) It was fun and Mother Nature kept me employed pulling out crystals on her special day! Happy Summer Solstice and looking forward to
the Autumnal Equinox and some cooler weather! Some results...
|
Cleaning some of the amazonite I found. Fairly pale but collectible. I clean the amazonite with Iron Out Goethite with detergent and agitator (aquarium bubbler) |
|
Assembling a flat of goethite crystals/sprays
|
.