Please help me identify this!

Hazykitten0

Tenderfoot
Joined
May 2, 2024
Messages
5
Reaction score
10
Golden Thread
0

Attachments

  • 20240502_153102.jpg
    20240502_153102.jpg
    1.6 MB · Views: 81
  • 20240502_115635.jpg
    20240502_115635.jpg
    1.5 MB · Views: 64
  • 20240502_115610.jpg
    20240502_115610.jpg
    1.4 MB · Views: 64
Upvote 8
welcome to treasurenet , try posting in the what is it section . I'm clueless but it's neat and would have picked it up too
 

Looks almost spherical. Get the weight and approximate the diameter ( put a box on opposing sides in parallel and measure between them) , or tape measure the circumference then it is easy to calculate a specific gravity estimate.
 

I'm not sure what I found. Definitely not a fossil after further examination. It is solid, non-magnetic and the bedrock formed around it. It is not bonded to it. It sets the metal detector off! The bedrock around it is a larger piece but weighs a 10th of what the ball does. Any opinions of thoughts are greatly appreciated.
It kind of looks like it might be a geode of some sort… It's hard to say with the pictures and it could just be a ”hot rock” that’s causing the detector to go off. I personally would have to crack it, chisel it or saw it open…most especially if I thought it was a geode. The circular item is more dense than the other stone?!? Yep, I would have to open it!
Good luck with an ID!👍🏼
 

It kind of looks like it might be a geode of some sort… It's hard to say with the pictures and it could just be a ”hot rock” that’s causing the detector to go off. I personally would have to crack it, chisel it or saw it open…most especially if I thought it was a geode. The circular item is more dense than the other stone?!? Yep, I would have to open it!
Good luck with an ID!👍🏼
Thank you for the response. I'm gonna get a wet saw tomorrow and see what it hold!
 

Looks almost spherical. Get the weight and approximate the diameter ( put a box on opposing sides in parallel and measure between them) , or tape measure the circumference then it is easy to calculate a specific gravity estimate.
Thank you for the response. It is 4 1/2 in wide when boxed. It is a sphere. When not sitting in the piece of bedrock that formed around it.
 

Attachments

  • 20240502_153102.jpg
    20240502_153102.jpg
    1.6 MB · Views: 11
Looks almost spherical. Get the weight and approximate the diameter ( put a box on opposing sides in parallel and measure between them) , or tape measure the circumference then it is easy to calculate a specific gravity estimate.
It kind of looks like it might be a geode of some sort… It's hard to say with the pictures and it could just be a ”hot rock” that’s causing the detector to go off. I personally would have to crack it, chisel it or saw it open…most especially if I thought it was a geode. The circular item is more dense than the other stone?!? Yep, I would have to open it!
Good luck with an ID!👍🏼
Yep!! Huge weight difference. Hoping for something great. A cool find for sure. Thankful I'm not the only one that would break into it.
 

Looks like two separate rocks that have been bored and pinned together. Possibly a metal dowel/spline inside.
 

I'm not sure what I found. Definitely not a fossil after further examination. It is solid, non-magnetic and the bedrock formed around it. It is not bonded to it. It sets the metal detector off! The bedrock around it is a larger piece but weighs a 10th of what the ball does. Any opinions of thoughts are greatly appreciated.
Nice!!! Congrats!!!
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top