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21 contributions to Rocks Rock!
Whats YOUR Geology?
Guys, Holy moly this is cool. I just found this amazing website thats a geological map of the ENTIRE WORLD How insane is that?? Just like Google Earth, you can now zoom in to anywhere on the planet and get a sense of what the bedrock is! 🤯 So check out the link! Whats YOUR geology?? Mine is gneiss, marble, schist, quartzite, even a little SERPENTINITE?? I'm in NYC šŸ¤—
Whats YOUR Geology?
1 like • 27d
Mine just said Glaciated!?!? šŸ¤·ā€ā™€ļø
Where are all your rocks? šŸ” 🪨
I keep my rocks all over my house er- tiny apartment. I live in a dense city and rocks have always been my connection to nature wherever I am. I’ve been picking them up my whole life! Mine are on shelves, windowsills, countertops. I have a box of bigger ones out on the fire escape. I was even putting some in the pots of my plants when I’d re-soil just to bring them back to home-y feeling and rediscover them later! So where are your rocks? Do you have a special shelf? Do you hold onto them for weeks? Months? Years?
Where are all your rocks? šŸ” 🪨
1 like • Dec '25
I just read your post in my dining room and was quite shocked when I realised there were no rocks or pebbles in here with me!! But then… I noticed a canvas on the wall - does that count?? Oh and then I noticed a jar of fossils phew. Panic over. Yes I can confirm they’re in every room of the house!!! šŸ˜‚šŸ˜‚šŸ˜‚
1 like • Dec '25
@Paul Schaffenberger a friend asked if I knew anyone into fossils!! I said I’d give them a go so I got given the jar already filled. The only problem with being gifted things from other peoples collections is I don’t know where any of them are from! Never mind what they are!! I haven’t even gone through the jar yet.
Rocks vs Stones
Believe it or not there is a subtle, yet important difference between the terms ā€˜Rock’ and ā€˜Stone’. Though using them interchangeably is not some big faux pas, it is interesting to note they are definitionally different. ROCK - a rock is usual replete with its natural jagged edges and mass. Rocks vary in size dramatically - from the palm of your hand to mountain sized boulders. A single continuous mass of minerals and mineraloids make up rocks. A rock is typically what we find on a hiking trail. STONE - a stone is defined differently mostly by its shape, smoothness, and size. A stone is typically weathered by nature or human intervention till the surface has lost all protruding features. Stones can be large, but typically aren’t recognized as such when they are larger than human scale. A stone is typically what we find on the shore of a lake. Stones are used in the context of construction or decoration. From geology.in : ā€œThe key thing to note is that geologists use "rock" as a broader term to describe large masses of material that make up the Earth's crust, including mountains, plateaus, and cliffs.ā€ Pretty cool right?
Rocks vs Stones
3 likes • Nov '25
Oh heck!!! I thought I was a rocker… but I might be a stoner!!!! šŸ˜³šŸ˜¬šŸ˜²šŸ˜‚
2 likes • Nov '25
Actually I do have both in my collection, but I think I have more stones. So…… is a pebble a small stone??
Where's Everybody From?
I'm curious where you guys are all from- rep your hometown below šŸ‘‡
Where's Everybody From?
3 likes • Nov '25
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3 likes • Nov '25
@Sara Swati Thank you so much Sara!! I love it when people are enthused by rocks!!!šŸ˜ My partner just doesn’t get it at all!! šŸ˜‚
Texas Rocks: Limestone!
Hi everyone, I’m in Texas right now, specifically San Antonio. The geology isn’t crazy diverse, but the rocks that do show off are particularly cool. South Texas is covered in Limestone. Around 500 million years ago, most of the southern US was covered by a warm shallow sea. It retreated overtime and left millions of crustaceans, coral and dead sea life exposed. Over time these fossilized while compacting and turned into a rich layer of rock. This is what we call Limestone. Limestone has some easy to identify features, like porousness, but can be confidently confirmed by an acid test. A couple drops of diluted hydrochloric acid (hydrogen peroxide is a common household acid that can work) causes the carbonate in the limestone to dissolve. While dissolving it fizzes and bubbles. When it does that, you’ve got limestone! The acid test proves carbonate is in the makeup of the rock. Carbonate is a derivative of organic matter. So if you get fizzing on your rock, that’s a good indication that part of the rock was once a living thing! Anyway, here’s some cool pictures of very porous limestone just hanging out in my parent’s neighborhood. Q: any limestone in your collection? Do the acid test and find out!
Texas Rocks: Limestone!
2 likes • Nov '25
Heck!! It looks like a dinosaur graveyard!!! Very impressive!! I’ve got lots of rocks with holes in!! Not sure what I’ve got with hyrdrogen peroxide in?????
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Daizy Wood Rowe
3
14points to level up
@daizy-wood-rowe-9123
Artist, crafter. Lover of patterns, pebbles, snowflakes, stars, the sea, abstract art, mandalas, peeling paint, blue hair & lemon tea.

Active 5d ago
Joined Oct 1, 2025
Cheshire, England. U.K.