Fossil Site at Blue Beach

For the most up to date events, check out our Gem, Mineral, and Fossil Newswire.


A fossil site open to the public can be elusive to find. You may be at the fossil site per all accounts, but should no fossils turn up, then your consolation is a nice day outdoors and getting some sun. My experience with a fossil site stems back to the ten years I lived in Texas. A site north of Galveston, on the Bolivar Peninsula was a crude, undeveloped, and open beach called McFaddin Beach. The coast had extended much further out into the Gulf of Mexico, and after a storm, or if you were lucky after a tide cycle, Pleistocene bones (bison, ancient horse, giant beaver, prehistoric fish) would wash up along with the rare Clovis Point. I had the pleasure of walking the beach 3 times, and every time swore I would go about it better the next time I went fossil hunting.
Continue reading “Fossil Site at Blue Beach”

Herkimer Diamond is the New York State Mineral

Herkimer Diamond, the unofficial state mineral of New York!

For the most up to date events, check out our Gem, Mineral, and Fossil Newswire.


Herkimer Diamond as the state mineral of New York? Did you know there was a New York state mineral? Did you know there had not been a state mineral? We knew none of the answers to these questions until an article by Robert Harding educated us on the legislation being pushed by New York State Senator James Seward to name the Herkimer Diamond the New York state mineral.
Continue reading “Herkimer Diamond is the New York State Mineral”