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/rocks/ - Rocks minerals and fossils

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File: 1411403145360.jpg (68.65 KB, 960x960, 1:1, 1389469401520.jpg)

 No.50[Reply]

This is your board for talking about and sharing your favorite rocks, minerals and fossils


Objects created from minerals like jade, cinnabar and malachite are fine too. Just keep it rock and mineral related and keep shitposting as minimal as possible.


File: 1411220013573.jpg (84.97 KB, 464x400, 29:25, 1389469350269.jpg)

 No.3[Reply]

Let's have a bismuth thread.
48 posts and 43 image replies omitted. Click reply to view.

 No.784

THIS SHIT IS SO FUCKING COOL THANK YOU NATURE


 No.787

Any /sci/encefags know how and why bismuth crystals take these forms? I know some stuff about the chemical composition of rocks, but I'm a bit ignorant as to crystal geometry


 No.801

>>122

Also, it's a Mineral, not technically a rock. There'd have to be other minerals mixed with it for the lump to be considered a rock.


 No.821

>>787

Copy-paste from wikipedia:

>Bismuth is a brittle metal with a white, silver-pink hue, often occurring in its native form, with an iridescent oxide tarnish showing many colors from yellow to blue. The spiral, stair-stepped structure of bismuth crystals is the result of a higher growth rate around the outside edges than on the inside edges. The variations in the thickness of the oxide layer that forms on the surface of the crystal causes different wavelengths of light to interfere upon reflection, thus displaying a rainbow of colors. When burned in oxygen, bismuth burns with a blue flame and its oxide forms yellow fumes.[12] Its toxicity is much lower than that of its neighbors in the periodic table, such as lead, antimony, and polonium.

>At ambient conditions bismuth shares the same layered structure as the metallic forms of arsenic and antimony,[23] crystallizing in the rhombohedral lattice[24] (Pearson symbol hR6, space group R3m No. 166), which is often classed into trigonal or hexagonal crystal systems.[2] When compressed at room temperature, this Bi-I structure changes first to the monoclinic Bi-II at 2.55 GPa, then to the tetragonal Bi-III at 2.7 GPa, and finally to the body-centered cubic Bi-IV at 7.7 GPa. The corresponding transitions can be monitored via changes in electrical conductivity; they are rather reproducible and abrupt, and are therefore used for calibration of high-pressure equipment.[25][26]

(Copy-paste fucked up one of the symmetry symbols though)


 No.823




File: 1456166684149.jpg (23.87 KB, 346x425, 346:425, get donked.jpg)

 No.822[Reply]

Nice dead board faggotron

Sincerely, /v/



File: 1415668447303.png (49.43 KB, 200x200, 1:1, carlos.png)

 No.290[Reply]

This board rocks.
11 posts and 2 image replies omitted. Click reply to view.

 No.749

>>724

carlos is gonna rock your world


 No.750

Stop making rock puns on my board, its very sedimental to me


 No.796

this dolomite be the best thread on this board


 No.803

8chan's really been bricking itself these past few months


 No.804

>>803

I fucking hate bricks




File: 1428707592015.jpg (5.78 MB, 4416x3312, 4:3, IMG_7326.JPG)

 No.683[Reply]

I just found some rocks on my local beach. Anyone able to give me information about them?
Some dupes
39 posts and 33 image replies omitted. Click reply to view.

 No.727

>>726

sea glass is pretty


 No.747

>>725

Buy one kek

I used to have a small one that I used on some of the materials I found. I live in New Mexico which has some very good mining spots. Hell even the town I lived in had a lot of shiny minerals.

Out in deming I found a few geodes on my own. I had to be extremely cautious of the desert heat (120f+), rattlesnakes, and scorpions, but it was well worth it.

Tumbling rocks takes a very, very long time. Even smaller sized ones take a while.


 No.765

File: 1432447294898.png (19.38 KB, 931x514, 931:514, Untitled.png)

>>725

Making one isn't hard.

Just scavenge an electric motor from something and build a frame out of wood. I used to have one with the same basic design as attached pic. It cost maybe $25 total, mostly just for bronze bushings for the axles.


 No.766

>>765

Very cool


 No.802

>>765

Just going to spitball here, but the cheapest place to get an electric motor, I think, would be to get something from a dollar store.

I got a motorized pumpkin scraper a few months ago that I've been meaning to dismantle so I could fix up an old RC car.

I'm not sure how you'd rig up the wheels and belts. Those sound a bit more complicated to put together from scavenged material.




File: 1426188148435-0.jpg (450.78 KB, 1600x1064, 200:133, IMGP4757.JPG)

File: 1426188148435-1.png (57.83 KB, 787x497, 787:497, Igneous - Chart - Magma Co….png)

File: 1426188148435-2.jpg (83.08 KB, 600x565, 120:113, Igneous - Diagram - Pluton….jpg)

File: 1426188148435-3.png (137.59 KB, 865x532, 865:532, Igneous - Diagram - Pyrocl….png)

File: 1426188148435-4.png (71.15 KB, 667x601, 667:601, Igneous - Diagram - Pluton….png)

 No.627[Reply]

Let's have a thread for describing and identifying rocks from thin sections and hand samples.

I've currently got an assload of igneous and metamorphic rocks to describe and ID, but I get the feeling that I'm fucking up and spending too much time on things that I should gloss over, or that I'm potentially calling a garnet a biotite just because it doesn't seem to have it's habit in the thin section.

I just grabbed this image from google since I can't take pictures through the microscope.

I think I've mostly forgotten how to ID a new mineral specimen in a thin section, and I'm mostly just trying to match up minerals to a short list of common minerals I already know.

How would you ID rocks and minerals, and how would you format your lab notes so that you'd have relevant diagnostic information?

 No.628

I can't help you, but I hope someone answers.

This board is the coolest and I want to learn more.

 No.753

Back again. I've found, made, and modified a couple of the resources I used, and passed the class with a decent B-.

I'm popping in to say that going on a field course of some kind was a very helpful thing. It taught me to generalize more and stop caring very much. Things are very iffy a built around a very guesswork-based framework, so this field course really helped me speed up my IDing.

I'd suggest people go through google to do a bunch of searching, make a big file of information from multiple sources (since some sources disagree with each other on where the barriers are for different rock and mineral types are), and ask your TAs, Professors, and possibly colleagues for what they use.

I had a bunch of my stuff printed out and stapled together into a reference sheet, with some more reference stuff bound in a duotang.

I'm going to try to make it a project to bind all my stuff into one duotang, but I'd need to go over and remake basically every bit of reference info I have. That'll be a bit of an adventure, and I've even lost most of the sources, but lots of the things I've found used the same sources without credit, so I think that won't be too much of an issue.


 No.754

>>753

Would you consider sharing this reference sheet? Or some references?


 No.800

>>754

Wow, I kept you hanging for a while, didn't I? Sorry about that.

I'll try to compile my main guide stuff, but for now I'll just post a link to my google drive where I saved all the resources I gathered that night.

I don't think it has everything, but it's a good pack of stuff.

https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B2aFXsttf6X1fkc5TDJReGdDYlJPRFVvUGJQT19CM1lMYTMtUWJldF9vVld1Y3F3Y0ZaaDg&usp=sharing

This should allow anyone with the link to view it.




File: 1423474299081-0.jpg (100.51 KB, 640x469, 640:469, 6malachite-africanart3230.jpg)

File: 1423474299081-1.jpg (174.78 KB, 640x578, 320:289, 6449malachite.jpg)

 No.472[Reply]

Malachite thread.
18 posts and 33 image replies omitted. Click reply to view.

 No.774

Fuck rocks are badass. How the fuck is malachite formed anyways?


 No.775

Trippy as fuck dude. Fuck drugs, pics of malachite are where it's at.


 No.790

>>774

weathering/alteration of primary copper deposits


 No.797

Are malachites valuable materials like gold. Or is it as valuable as my shit?


 No.799

>>797

It's a semi-precious stone.




File: 1443881243042.jpg (57.14 KB, 360x345, 24:23, Lorandite min, 3_8x3_6x1_5….jpg)

 No.798[Reply]

(Picture from google although Im waiting for mine in the mail) I love thallium minerals and arsenic minerals, the reds are axquisite from both Tl and As. Anyone else collect by chemistry here?



File: 1434471875512.png (327.2 KB, 640x480, 4:3, patria granitica.png)

 No.778[Reply]

Hey dudes, /x/ here.

You're probably gonna want to beat me up for stating this, but is there any love in here for the feeling that granite expresses?

I come from a place where most old buildings are from granite stone, and it does give the town a strange mood, like if there is a perma-fog stuck in time. This rock has so much importance, that in pre-roman times there where a few cults that went as far as describing it as the primordial rock. They even spent quite a while looking for something they called the "Granite Seed".

So, I dunno. Granite thread? Mysticism + rocks thread?

 No.783

Granite does feel nice to the touch but I dont know about all that other /x/ stuff.


 No.788

File: 1435861740629-0.jpg (102.57 KB, 776x564, 194:141, precambrian_rocks_and_mobi….JPG)

File: 1435861740630-1.jpg (33.61 KB, 410x273, 410:273, fig1.jpg)

>>778

Well it is a sialic mineral and probably the most typical rock of plutonic felsic igneous formations. Alongside it's metamorphic equivalent, granitic gneiss, it's the type of rock you'd expect to find in plenty of in and around cratons

The difference between the two is that granitic gniesses have experienced more compression and semi-melting than unaltered granitic intrusions, which makes sense considering how cratons sit for eons under continents without experiencing volcanism or tectonism. First pic related.

Contrast this to sialic rocks near mobile belts, which are constantly eroded into sediments and then lithified. (However, uplifting does create more vaccums for intrusion to occur, which simply does not occur in cratons).

On a slightly less autistic note, the mica, orthoclaise feldspar and quartz create a beautiful warm tone. Second pic related

>too autistic: didn't read:

It's found near the interiors of continents


 No.789

File: 1436308484796.jpg (16.15 KB, 250x250, 1:1, 1300044776986.jpg)

>>788

>>implying granite is a mineral

>>Implying granite is more common than granodiorite

>>implying metamorphism requires partial-melting

>>What is accretion?

>>implying granite doesn't primarily form through fractionation and assimilation processes in arc/back-arc settings


 No.793

>>789

>implying metamorphism requires partial-melting

I never said that. Cratonic materials undergo metamorphosis from sitting underground for a very long time, usually WITHOUT partial-melting or tectonism.

Contrast this to granite near mobile belts, which, compared to cratonic material, is more likely to be eroded and fragmented due to uplift exposure to the elements. It would just get eroded into sediment before it has a chance to undergo metamorphosis into gniess

>implying granite doesn't primarily form through fractionation and assimilation processes in arc/back-arc settings

See

>However, uplifting does create more vaccums for intrusion to occur, which simply does not occur in cratons

You're just paraphrasing my point

My point is that true granite rather than gniess will be under mobile belts, whereas gniess will more likely be in cratons. I don't see why you're trying to distort this


 No.794

File: 1437241004201.jpg (20.37 KB, 250x250, 1:1, 1436308484796.jpg)

>>793

Exact quote from you:

>>The difference between the two is that granitic gniesses have experienced more compression and semi-melting than unaltered granitic intrusions

But go ahead and keep slinging jargon around, it'll impress the casuals.

>>Implying metamorphism takes billions of years

>>What is the D'Entrecasteaux ultra high pressure terrain




File: 1411496270620.jpg (489.84 KB, 1540x1127, 220:161, BACK_4_2_8_TRACHYT_HERMANO….jpg)

 No.69[Reply]

Sculptorfag here

I must say that out of all the rocks I have touched, I loved trachyte the most.

Sandstone is good like a country girl, and a crystal is fancy like an expensive whore, but where is your love for the noble rocks?

Why leave marble by the roadside?
13 posts and 8 image replies omitted. Click reply to view.

 No.682

File: 1428701234737.jpg (1.27 MB, 4256x2832, 266:177, saint_petersburg_russia-ma….jpg)

>>281
Fuck dakimakuras, marble statues for the win

 No.748

File: 1430822805957-0.jpg (81.34 KB, 800x600, 4:3, 800px-Pan_copulating_with_….JPG)

File: 1430822805957-1.jpg (428.27 KB, 1920x1200, 8:5, lion .jpg)

File: 1430822805958-2.jpg (86 KB, 1600x727, 1600:727, borghese_hermaphroditus_lo….jpg)

File: 1430822805980-3.jpg (45.01 KB, 800x532, 200:133, BorghesehermaphrodtieBerni….jpg)

File: 1430822805980-4.jpg (161.56 KB, 1280x780, 64:39, 1280px-Louvre_-_Sleeping_H….jpg)


 No.752

Do you think people tried to hot glue statues back then?


 No.785

File: 1435598090988-0.jpg (107.74 KB, 640x885, 128:177, 640px-AlexanderTheGreat_Bu….jpg)

File: 1435598091012-1.jpg (60.99 KB, 900x599, 900:599, and-jesus-wept.jpg)

File: 1435598091012-2.jpg (39.04 KB, 350x450, 7:9, crying blood.jpg)

File: 1435598091012-3.jpg (105.61 KB, 1024x683, 1024:683, Paris_Tuileries_Garden_Fac….jpg)

File: 1435598091045-4.jpg (119.77 KB, 900x1117, 900:1117, oh for christs sake.jpg)

I've got a reaction folder of stone statues if anyone wants… Not many.


 No.786

>>752

I can guarantee you they did.




File: 1434755903094-0.jpg (388.18 KB, 1280x854, 640:427, 1434621263383-2.jpg)

File: 1434755903138-1.jpg (151.38 KB, 960x720, 4:3, 1434620846287-3.jpg)

File: 1434755903162-2.jpg (290.96 KB, 500x320, 25:16, 1434621214919-1.jpg)

 No.780[Reply]

Do you guys like to post rocks?

Do you like to post rocks that are the same type/color?

Then I have a neat board for you.

>>>/aesthetic/



File: 1411305234727.png (609.13 KB, 750x595, 150:119, 1389471158824.png)

 No.29[Reply]

How about a minerals crafts thread?
5 posts and 3 image replies omitted. Click reply to view.

 No.76

File: 1411509799655.jpg (Spoiler Image, 19.83 KB, 400x406, 200:203, Malachite-Crystal-Skull-Pe….jpg)

>>74
Sorry.

 No.111

File: 1411758483041-0.jpg (64.01 KB, 580x544, 145:136, eclectic-accessories-and-d….jpg)

File: 1411758483041-1.jpg (333.2 KB, 2463x2602, 2463:2602, piano_malachite_plaque._qu….jpg)


 No.128

File: 1411923801652-0.jpg (126.91 KB, 424x560, 53:70, 90622919364189.jpg)

File: 1411923801652-1.jpg (78.34 KB, 720x582, 120:97, LH019.jpg)


 No.130

File: 1411923893295-0.jpg (87.96 KB, 800x783, 800:783, CHINESE-OLD-HANDWORK-GREEN….jpg)

File: 1411923893295-1.jpg (170.04 KB, 600x514, 300:257, 899129185541563.jpg)


 No.779

>>111

Wow, that piano. I wonder how it sounds.




File: 1427334178889.jpg (160.2 KB, 1215x717, 405:239, malphite.jpg)

 No.675[Reply]

What does /rocks/ think of rock representation in videogames?
1 post omitted. Click reply to view.

 No.722

>>678

What do you think of Dwarf Fortress then?


 No.755

>>722

Never played it


 No.764

File: 1432446614449.jpg (714.97 KB, 950x1164, 475:582, South-Crofty-Mining-Method.jpg)

>>722

It could be improved but generally reasonably good as far as video games are concerned.

Generally magma/lava is totally unrealstic in games. There is no magma sea like in dwarf fortress for example.


 No.773

>>678

You might wanna try the terrafirmacraft modification.

It tries to add realistic sediments and many rock types which are only found in certain spots.


 No.776

>>722

dwarf fortress just takes a ridiculous amount of minerals and rocks and puts them in horizontal layers on your map. I think it does not mix up sediments and igneous rocks etc, which is pretty good. The names of ores respond to their rl-counterparts (malachite is gonna get you copper etc.), even though the quantities of metal you get out of them is way out of proportion.

Anybody who ever looked at a geological map knows that the horizontal-layer approach can inherently not lead to anything even remotely realistic (or interesting, for that matter…).

Not much to do with rocks, but a pedologic rehaul would also help a lot




File: 1433455061957.jpg (2.51 MB, 2787x2181, 929:727, IMG_000576876.JPG)

 No.770[Reply]

Anyone on here like drawing or sketching rocks/landscapes/geological shit?

I want to do more volcano themed drawings. Criticism is welcome

 No.771

>>770

asdf




File: 1432347298621.jpg (740.11 KB, 1704x2272, 3:4, Willamette_Meteorite_AMNH[….jpg)

 No.760[Reply]

The Willamette Meteorite, officially named Willamette,[3] is an iron-nickel meteorite discovered in the U.S. state of Oregon. It is the largest meteorite found in North America and the sixth largest in the world.[4][5] There was no impact crater at the discovery site; researchers believe the meteorite landed in what is now Canada or Montana, and was transported as a glacial erratic to the Willamette Valley during the Missoula Floods at the end of the last Ice Age (~13,000 years ago).[6] The meteorite is currently on display at the American Museum of Natural History, which acquired the meteorite in 1906.[5] Having been seen by an estimated 40 million people over the years, and given its striking appearance, it is among the most famous meteorites known.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willamette_Meteorite

 No.769

File: 1433292641892.gif (439.04 KB, 500x378, 250:189, 1393050308670.gif)

If I ever pass through Oregon I'll have to see this.




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