Rock Shop Review – Pezrok Gems, Minerals, Fossils Gallery in Blue Ridge, Georgia

Pezrock Gems and Minerals of Blue Ridge Georgia

524 E Main St, Blue Ridge, Georgia 30513

Blue Ridge, Georgia is one of North Georgia’s true “gems.” Full of fine restaurants, cool dive bars, adult arcades, fine dining, easy dining, the wonderful Blue Ridge Scenic Railway, and also one of the finest gem, mineral, fossil and interior design stores that American Geode had ever visited. The expensive minerals are well labeled with relevant provenance and history and Pezrock also has very affordable minerals, gems and fossils and they are also well documented.

We were instantly impressed to see that they have out on the Main Street Blue Ridge sidewalk and geode cracked, that we instantly recognized as a version of a sawed off soil pipe cutter like the one American Geode uses to crack geodes!

Pezrock Gems and Minerals of Blue Ridge Georgia
Pezrock Gems and Minerals of Blue Ridge Georgia

In addition to the fine minerals, gems, and crystals, we discovered interior design concepts and a kitchen showroom constructed with counter tops and panels of the famous Green River fish fossils, and the kitchen bar stools and other home furniture like dining tables were carved from old hardwood in a style that maintained the form of the tree trunks and limbs. These were some of the most beautiful home designs we had ever seen, and made you want to own a home to incorporate these gorgeous Green River fossil designs,

Pezrock Gems and Minerals of Blue Ridge Georgia
Pezrock Gems and Minerals of Blue Ridge Georgia

So when in Blue Ridge, be sure to visit Pezrock as you must see their collection with your own eyes to believe it, and you will likely want to acquire one of their fine works too. Please tell them you read about Pezrock on NorthGeorgiaCulture.com!

Pezrock Gems and Minerals of Blue Ridge Georgia
Pezrock Gems and Minerals of Blue Ridge Georgia
Pezrock Gems and Minerals of Blue Ridge Georgia
Pezrock Gems and Minerals of Blue Ridge Georgia

The Geology and Minerals of North Georgia

Geology of Yonah Mountain, North Georgia

There’s gold (and quartz) in them thar hills!!!

From our recent new homebase in North Georgia, let’s talk about the Blue Ridge and the Piedmont lands and the geology and minerals of North Georgia. We’ll look at them together, seeing as how the rocks there, the ones that got squeezed and heated up (that’s metamorphic, you know) and the ones that bubbled up from the earth like old volcanoes (igneous), well, they’re cut from pretty much the same cloth.

Now, the old-timers figure that way back yonder, the whole shebang of North America bumped right into this big ol’ landmass called Gondwana, and that’s how they got Pangea, this super-duper continent. That mighty clashing of the earth’s plates, it caused all sorts of cracks and wrinkles in the Blue Ridge and Piedmont here in Georgia. And all that pressure and heat? Why, it just folded and lifted those rocks right up.

The Blue Ridge Mountains, bless their hearts, they’re some of the ancientest hills you ever did see, a whole lot older than those young whippersnappers out west, the Rockies, and even them big fellas over in Asia, the Himalayas. When the Blue Ridge first poked their heads up, they’d have been some of the tallest things around, I reckon. But then the rains came, and the floods, and they just washed away tons and tons of rock and dirt down into the lowlands, the plateau, and even further out. Some folks who study rocks have even found bits of that old wash way out in Arizona, in the Grand Canyon!

Later on, that Pangea thing, which included these very Appalachian Mountains, well, it got all torn apart by more of that earth movin’ and shakin’. Scientists have found pieces of these same Appalachians way down in South America, over in northwest Africa, and even in Greenland, Great Britain, and Europe. But nowadays, all that’s left standin’ here are the tough old cores of these Appalachian rocks.

Now, up in northeast Georgia, them Blue Ridge Mountains make up the highest ground in the whole state. Here in Georgia, these rounded ridges and worn-down peaks go from about sixteen hundred feet up to nearly forty-seven hundred feet above sea level. The whole Appalachian chain goes even further, roughly from Alabama all the way up to New York.

The Blue Ridge, they’re known for that pretty blue haze that hangs over ’em, and for their mighty steep gorges, canyons, and waterfalls. Take Tallulah Gorge, for instance, down there in northeast Georgia. It’s a good six hundred feet deep, making it the fourth deepest canyon east of them Rocky Mountains. Mighty impressive!

Now, the southern edge of the Blue Ridge is near this thing called the Brevard Fault Line. Right on the other side of that line, you got the Piedmont, and it’s made up of some mighty old rocks too. The story goes that these rocks started out as just plain old muddy clay that settled way down deep in the ocean. Seems like mud gets carried the furthest from land that’s wearin’ away, mixes in with some sand, and then just sinks to the bottom of the deep blue sea. Then, when that mud gets squeezed and heated up (that metamorphism again), it turns into mica. And as most folks around here know, Georgia’s got plenty of that sparkly mica.

The rockhounds have also found a lot of this stuff called Metagraywacke, which is just sandstone that’s been changed by heat and pressure. Graywacke, that’s what they call the stuff before it changes, forms in layers of clay and sand that got sorted out in deep water with strong currents. The bigger bits of gravel and sand sink to the bottom first, and then the finer stuff settles on top. Over time, all that gets cooked and squeezed, and out pops Metagraywacke.

Now, there’s all sorts of different metamorphic rocks and minerals in the Blue Ridge area. That’s ’cause it’s been through a whole bunch of episodes with different amounts of heat and pressure and foldin’. Along the western edge of the Blue Ridge, where things weren’t quite as intense, you find slate and phyllite (some folks call it fillite). Then, as you go further in, you find minerals like chlorite (that forms at around two hundred degrees Fahrenheit), shiny silver muscovite, black biotite, garnets, and staurolite. And over on the eastern side, where things got real hot and squeezed tight, you can find kyanite (that takes about eleven hundred degrees Fahrenheit to form!), sillimanite, andalusite, some pretty zebra-striped gneiss, and even migmatites.

And that ain’t all! We got copper, marble (that used to be limestone, like around Tate), talc, this old blue quartz meta-granite (got its color from titanium), quartzite rings around Tallulah Dome, and even some of that igneous granite in the Blue Ridge. Why, even Mount Yonah over in White County is made of this granitic gneiss. It formed way back when molten granite pushed its way up into layers of metamorphic rock.

Now, one more thing you’ll find in both the metamorphic and igneous rocks of the Blue Ridge and the Piedmont is quartz. It can form when hot, watery stuff full of silica pushes into cracks in the rock and makes veins. And gold? Well, gold can be found in those same kind of veins, along with quartz and some other minerals like pyrite. In fact, if you see quartz veins that are stained with iron, that can be a sign that there might be gold nearby. Them gold deposits in the Blue Ridge led to the first big gold rush in America, right around Dahlonega, Georgia. Read our review of the Dahlonega Gold Museum here: http://www.americangeode.com/blog/dahlonega-gold-rush-museum-review/. You can also find a little bit of gold scattered in those igneous granites, but most of the gold folks have dug up over the years came from what they call placer deposits – that’s just old river and stream gravel that’s been worn away over time.

Remember to #getoutandrockhound and share www.americangeode.com with your rockhound friends!

Rockhounding, Hiking, and Exploring the Geology of North Georgia

Yonah Mountain

Since moving back to North Georgia in late 2024, American Geode are loving and appreciating the chances for rockhounding, hiking, and exploring all the geology and geologic wonders of North Georgia. The North Georgia geology is a lot of metamorphic, so while there are few fossils to be found, North Georgia is full of quartz, some garnets, some amethyst and the rare gold discovery in Dahlonega that kicked off the first American Gold Rush and the infamous “Trail of Tears” for the Cherokee Indians (http://www.americangeode.com/blog/dahlonega-gold-rush-museum-review/). One of the benefits and advantage of living in North Georgia are that we are in the middle of dozens of state and federal parks, with plenty of variety for hiking experiences in the mountains.

We recently visited the Charles Smithgall Woods, https://gastateparks.org/SmithgallWoods, for a day hike to see Mount Yonah. The Smithgall Woods were gifted to the state of Georgia by philanthropist Charles Smithgall who also started a dog and cat shelter that American Geode supports, https://charlessmithgallhumanesociety.org/. This hike is just under 2 miles and can be completed in less than an hour unless you stop to smell the Georgia mountain laurel and take selfies in front of one of the best views of Mount Yonah. American Geode hiked the trail called Laurel Ridge Trail, and it was a delight.

The American Geode team hiked it during the week, so the crowds were a little lighter than on the weekends. While rockhounding is technically not permissible, we enjoyed so much admiring the geology of the hike as it descends up and then down a mountain. We took so many pictures and spotted numerous varieties of butterflies and saw a copperhead snake from the distance, whom we did not approach but seeing a copperhead was magnificent and a thrill. Hiking is a great workout, and we look forward to hiking all the trails of Charles Smithgall Woods. See our pictures of Mount Yonah (aka Yonah Mountain around North Georgia) and imagine what a gorgeous landscape you will see depending on the day, weather, and time of year.

Contact American Geode directly for any advice or questions, and enjoy rockhounding North Georgia!

Yonah Mountain
Yonah Mountain
Yonah Mountain
Yonah Mountain
Yonah Mountain
Yonah Mountain
Geology of Yonah Mountain, North Georgia
Geology of Yonah Mountain, North Georgia

Tips and Suggestions for visiting the American Museum of Natural History in New York

Subway Garnet

We love the American Museum of Natural History; we actually love all the museums of New York City. The American Museum of Natural History, AMNH, contain so much information to be read, observed, viewed and not to be missed, that you may want to devote two days to a visit, but here are a few tips and suggestions that are especially relevant to rockhounds and geology, mineral, and fossil enthusiasts.

The first and we do mean first tip to enjoying your visit to AMNH is to enter on the Columbus Avenue side. Enter on the side opposite, on the other street, on the backside, and do not wait in the long line on the Central Park West main entrance with the pair of lion stone sculptures. That main entrance always has a line that can last up to an hour. On the other side of the museum is another entrance that rarely has a line, and you can walk right in if you pre-paid for your tickets and you can buy your tickets there too. This is a very important trick that you will thank us for once you experience the difference and convenience and ease of entering the museum on the Columbus Ave side.

A benefit of entering the museum on the Columbus Avenue side is that the first major hall and exhibition you enter is the newly remodeled famous Mignone Halls of Gems and Minerals. This is a fascinating gem of an exhibition that contains some of the largest minerals in the world, some of the most rare minerals and fossils in the world, and education and insight throughout. When we were there last, we spent 2 hours just in the area for gems, minerals, and fossils, and then right next door is the equally fascinating insect and bug hall and exhibits where you get to see live insects as well.

So plan your visit wisely fellow rockhound and gem, mineral, fossil enthusiasts, and start your visit to the American Museum of Natural History from the Columbus Ave entrance. Enjoy photos below from our March 2025 visit to New York and contact American Geode with any questions. #NewYorkRocks

Knoxville Gem & Mineral Society 2021 Show!

Knoxville Gem & Mineral Society 2021 Annual Gem Show

Rothchild Conference Center 8807 Kingston Pike, Knoxville, TN 37923

Friday, October 15, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm Saturday, October 16, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm Sunday, October 17, 11:00 am – 5:00 pm

As a precaution for Covid masks will be required for admittance.

The show will feature 23 vendors with a wide variety of jewelry, fossil and mineral specimens, meteorites, gemstones, and decorative objects. There will also be educational activities and gem and mineral ID tables. Admission Adults: $6.00 Run of Show Pass: $10.00 Children Under 12: Free