[Rockhounds] Garza update
Alan Goldstein
deepskyspy at outlook.com
Sun Oct 4 11:04:01 PDT 2020
Steve and Dee say, "Hello. Everything's good." They haven't left their homestead is early March.
Steve has been more actively identifying minerals with a microscope the last month or so. We had a couple of collectors over yesterday, one an ex-New Englander going bonkers over the large amount of Strickland Quarry and obscure New England localities. I was able to get a number of specimens or localities while Steve was outside in the sunshine and will make a new list which I will post as an ad. It will take some time to go through the thousand+ specimens I brought home over the last 2 days.
I've mentioned the randomness in packing he did when he moved to his current location a dozen or so years ago. Yesterday, I found a large box labeled "Fossils & Misc." on a top shelve. Intrigued, and not wishing to hurt myself, I cut open the box from the side. The weight was from a half dozen giant fossil clams (double-fist-sized) from who knows where. Probably Miocene to Pliocene age. In the middle was a plastic cookie box stuffed with "autunite" from the Ruggles Mine, Grafton Co., NH. With a UV flashlight inside the garage with the lights on, the specimens fluoresced like a good piece of willemite from Franklin, NJ!
I'm taking my extended vacation, and it will include some collecting trips in the area and cleaning and labeling Garza minerals. I know I'll find more interesting specimens. I already found a beautiful Cave in Rock fluorite among crappy rocks. Luckily everything was well-wrapped. Dee had threatened to empty the garage as road rock, but I've been able to salvage and help sell thousands of specimens that were too nice (and historically important) for the driveway. The dregs I'm dumping on the mineral collecting piles at the Falls of the Ohio State Park where others are having fun digging and making their own discoveries.
Regards,
Alan G.
More information about the Rockhounds
mailing list