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Filling Earth's Oceans with Water
One Meteorite at a Time, Per One Smoking Gun
Ichthyosaur Birthing Resembled that of Gray Whales
Prepare for a New Era of Boots-on-the-Ground Exploration
The Magnetic Field of Mars
Life Would Have Depended on It
Geoengineering Earth's Oceans
From Science Fiction to Science Fact
Leaving Earth Behind
A Record Number of Rockets Take off from Earth in 2022
Concrete for the Ages
What the Romans Knew that We Might Learn
THE CURIOUS LORE OF George Frederick Kunz
America's First Gemologist
Volcanoes and Emeralds
I've had the privilege to give lectures worldwide at shows, club meetings and retreats. I've also done videos and DVDs including Russian Gem Treasures, shot in Russia and another associated with the Smithsonian about American gem mines.
THE MAGIC OF MARBLE
Sculptors and architects have an abundance of natural stone materials to choose from alabaster, travertine, granite, limestone and soapstone to name a few. But one medium has always stood out - marble. For the last 2,500 years, marble has been chosen for many of the greatest works of sculpture and architecture, from the Parthenon of Classical Greece to Michelangelo's Pietà and Washington D.C.'s Lincoln Memorial.
COLOR-THERAPY Gemstones
Designing Jewelry Based on the Healing Properties of Colors
The Silver of POTOSI
Triumph, Tragedy & El Tío
CURVED RIDGES SHAPED TIPS
Complex carving with curved ridges and shaped tips can be daunting.
NIPOMO MARCASITE
Many of the digging locations for this marcasite are on private property. It was allowed at one point to collect with the owner's permission, but a few rockhounds ruined it for the rest by trespassing, trampling newly-grown crops, and opening and closing gates not allowing cattle to get to their water sources. As a result, this material hasn’t been dug for a few decades.”
PAIL Treasures!
From Gems to Fossils, Dig Them at Home
RV Rockhounding
ON THE ROAD WITH THAT CAMPING COUPLE
The Pleasures and Perils of Competitive Exhibiting
Competitive exhibiting offers lots of opportunities to earn awards through venues like club shows, county fairs, trade shows and Federation shows. Since 1995, I've been involved in competitive exhibiting from three perspectives: administering, judging and exhibiting. Here are my suggestions for best practices.
ULTIMATE Gift Guide FOR ROCKHOUNDS
What to Buy for the Rock Lover in Your Life
The Webb Space Telescope It's Not Just for the Stars!
Fanfare surrounding the new Webb Space Telescope focuses on spectacular images from the far reaches of the universe. But Webb also has provided revealing looks at the sister planets within our own solar system.
The Chimeric Dream to Forecast Volcanic Eruptions
It has been a dream to accurately forecast a violent volcanic eruption long in advance. To some, it's a chimeric dream that will never produce concrete results.
When Did We Become Warm-Blooded?
A New Technique Explores the Question
A New Member of the Human Family Tree?
Although beginning with a common ancestor, humans and chimps parted ways long ago, with humans walking upright and chimps remaining as knuckle-walkers.
Whither the Koh-i-Noor Diamond?
It's the stuff of legend! The 105-carat Koh-i-Noor is an oval diamond so big and brilliant its Persian name translates as \"Mountain of Light.\"
Detecting Earthquakes from Above Both Here - and on Venus?
When we think of earthquake monitoring, we think of ground-based networks of seismometers, ground-hugging fiber-optic cables, and similar ground-based systems. After all, if trying to detect rumblings within the ground, shouldn't we hug the ground? Well, not necessarily per an article in Geophysical Research Letters.
AFRICA’S OLDEST DINO
The skeleton is nearly complete and, depending on the report, it's been described as the size of a collie dog, an emu, or a Shetland pony at about three feet tall and six feet long. Say hello to Africa's oldest dinosaur, Mbiresaurus raathi!
Did Dinos Die From a One-Two-Three Punch?
It has been widely accepted that a giant asteroid from space struck the area of Chicxulub on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula and unleashed worldwide chaos that ultimately doomed the nonavian dinosaurs to extinction. Now it appears that asteroid had a sister-or two.
Earth’s Crust and the Milky Way
In attempting to explain earthly phenomena, geologists tend to look downward at Earth itself. It now appears they need to shift their gaze skyward.
Want a Dino? Search Your Own Backyard!
When a man in Monte Agudo, Pombal in Portugal dug into his backyard garden in 2017, he found much more than a soup bone buried by the dog. He stumbled across giant ribs of what is believed to be a brachiosaurid.
Using Deep Learning to View the Rich Data of Seismology
Seismology is a data-rich science. Vast arrays employing thousands of sensors continuously sample and monitor for seismic waves and motion. Sampling rates can involve 100 points per second.
“THE SPANISH STONEHENGE” RESURFACES And a New One Is Found!
The Iberian Peninsula is in severe drought, drier than it's been for 1,200 years. Although that is bad news, it has been a boon for scientists. As a reservoir has shrunk to record low levels, a prehistoric monument of about 100 rocks has resurfaced, rocks arranged in a stone circle not so different from England's famed Stonehenge.
DON'T GET Fooled While Gold PANNING
A Guide to Know What's What