Category: Geodes

  • The World’s Largest Geode?

    Geology.com has numerous articles about Earth Science World Records. These feature the world’s tallest tsunami, world’s largest volcano, world’s tallest geyser and more. We have learned from these articles that picking the largest, tallest, deepest, etc. will be met with disagreements about measurement methods, qualifying criteria, and more. Similar problems surround naming “the world’s largest geode”. The definition of a…

  • Amethyst Amygdules of Brazil and Uruguay

    Without question, the most spectacular geode deposit ever discovered is the amethyst amygdule basalts of Rio Grande do Sul region of Brazil and adjacent Uruguay. About 160 million years ago, when plate tectonic processes were rifting Africa and South America apart as the Atlantic Ocean opened, one of the world’s great flood basalt events was…

  • Other Famous Geode Localities

    There are hundreds of areas around the world where geodes of various types can be found in abundance. Most of these deposits are small and support the collecting activities of a few rockhounds. However, other deposits are extensive, with enough geodes to support a commercial collection and manufacturing industry. Oco (Ocho) Geodes Oco or Ocho…

  • Oregon Thundereggs

    Thundereggs are not geodes, but they are so similar that they deserve at least one locality mention in this article. The state of Oregon is the most famous thunderegg locality in the world. Thundereggs are found in rhyolite and tuff deposits in many parts of the state. In 1965 the Oregon Legislative Assembly issued a…

  • Arizona Gem Silica Geodes

    Some unusual geodes and nodules found at the Inspiration Mine in Gila County, Arizona are lined with gem silica, a rare, beautiful and valuable form of blue chalcedony. Some have been found with gem silica stalactites!

  • Woodbury Geodes

    Woodbury geodes occur in the area around Woodbury, Tennessee. They originated in the limestones and dolostones of the Warsaw Formation and can be seen where these rock units are outcropping. Liberated geodes are found in residual soils above the rock units in which they formed, and in the sediments of the valleys that drain these…

  • Geodes of Indiana

    In south-central Indiana geodes can often be seen in exposures of the Harrodsburg Limestone and Ramp Creek Formations. The Indiana Geological Survey reports that geodes are abundant along streams and scattered on the ground for several miles on either side of their outcrop areas.

  • Dugway Geodes

    One of the most interesting geode deposits in the United States is in Juab County, Utah. Between 32,000 and 14,000 years ago, Lake Bonneville covered much of what is now western Utah. Wave action along the shores of the lake eroded geode-bearing rhyolite flows. The wave action, along with weathering, liberated the geodes from the…

  • Geodes of Wisconsin

    The Geological and Natural History Survey of Wisconsin reports numerous occurrences of geodes, Lake Superior agate nodules, and thundereggs within the state. These have been in Ashland, Chippewa, Clark, Crawford, Douglas, Dunn, Grant, La Crosse, Milwaukee, Pepin, Pierce, St. Croix, Sheboygan, Trempealeau, and Washburn Counties.

  • Geodes of Kentucky

    Parts of the Fort Payne and Warsaw-Salem Formations of Kentucky contain large numbers of geodes. These have weathered out of their host rock units and are now found in stream valleys. Other areas where numerous geodes are found in Kentucky stream valleys include the Green River in the south-central part of the state and along…