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Aetherian
Joined: 20 Aug 2020
Posts: 1
Location: Washington


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Posted: Aug 21, 2020 07:24 Post subject: Does anyone know what this may be?! |
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I found this buried pretty tightly shining at bottom of river here in Washington State
Mineral: | Unsure |
Dimensions: | About 10 inches across and 8 inches tall. Weighs about 60 lbs |
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James Catmur
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Joined: 14 Sep 2006
Posts: 1462
Location: Cambridge



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Posted: Aug 21, 2020 07:34 Post subject: Re: Does anyone know what this may be?! |
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It is a large rock containing quartz
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Pete Richards
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Joined: 29 Dec 2008
Posts: 842
Location: Northeast Ohio



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Posted: Aug 21, 2020 09:14 Post subject: Re: Does anyone know what this may be?! |
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I think this might be a pyrite nodule, composed largely of pyrite (fool's gold), iron sulfide, which is quite dense as mineral go.
So I'm guessing this is rather heavy for a rock of its size. If you had some way to estimate its volume, then we could calculate an average specific gravity for the entire stone.
One way to do this: Fill a bucket to the top with water. Immerse the rock in the water. An amount of water equal to its volume will spill out (do this outside...) Remove the rock. Using a measuring cup, fill the bucket to the top again, keeping track of how much water it takes to fill it. That's the volume of the rock. The specific gravity is the weight divided by the volume. Any value greater than about 3.0 would be above average for typical rocks and minerals. Pure pyrite would be about 5.
_________________ Collecting and studying crystals with interesting habits, twinning, and epitaxy |
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Pete Modreski
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Joined: 30 Jul 2007
Posts: 710
Location: Denver, Colorado



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Posted: Aug 21, 2020 11:05 Post subject: Re: Does anyone know what this may be?! |
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I'll agree, that this is most likely pyrite, Aetherian. Likely mixed with quartz (if there's obvious white mineral material with it). If the whole rock is pyrite, it should feel REALLY heavy.
If it were gold (VERY unlikely), you'd be able to scratch the golden-metallic material easily, with the point of a knife or a nail. Pyrite is hard enough, it won't scratch.
Another test, if you break off a crumb of it, hit is with a hammer on a hard surface and pyrite will shatter to a powder, which will look more of a greenish-metallic color. And you likely will smell a whiff of sulfur, if you powder it that way.
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