Posted on 01/30/2005 12:27:30 PM PST by hispanarepublicana
Erica Molina
El Paso Times
Photos by Victor Calzada / El Paso Times Stanton James uses a flashlight to show the translucence of a rock he has had analyzed in an effort to find its origins. |
Stanton James is searching for the origin of two rocks he bought about three years ago from a man for $5. |
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"You could see these and just walk right past them," James said.
But once the lights are out, the muffin-shaped rocks can show what makes them special. A flashlight held up to one end will make the rocks light up like small lamps. A black light reveals spots on them that glow green and then fade slowly after the light is turned off.
Although James has turned to experts for help in figuring out whether the rocks are some kind of fossilized organism, he has only been able to find out that they are are made of silica -- a commonly found mineral. He thinks that silica could have replaced the organism.
After James asked for help from the public in October 2003 in figuring out what the rocks could be, several people contacted him who were concerned for his safety.
"They thought they might be radioactive," James said.
A test with a Geiger counter showed they were safe.
He approached professors at the University of Texas at El Paso last spring to get their opinions on his specimens. They ran a test that determined the rocks were made of silica.
But James wants to know more. He suspects the rocks might have once been living, judging by their similarities in appearance. He has not yet found a scientist who agrees with that theory.
He even wrote to the Smithsonian Institution, asking for any help they could give. The response he got was an idea of what they could be made of -- silica -- but he was told experts there needed details about where the rocks came from to answer with more certainty what the specimens could be.
"Part of our problem is Mr. James doesn't know where these came from. If we knew where they came from, we could look at the area and figure things out," said William Cornell, a geology professor at UTEP. "Since we have no idea, we're kind of stuck. There's not much we can do to identify them."
James bought the rocks for $5 about about three years ago from a man in Chaparral, N.M., but James doesn't know where the man got them, nor does he know where the man lives. He said that at this point he is fairly sure the rocks are not organic in origin.
James hopes someone might recognize his rocks as similar to rocks that other people might have in their private collections.
"If they're out there hiking in the mountains and think they see a rock with this profile shape, please don't disturb it," he said. "Note it's location and notify a member of the scientific community."
He said that determining the origin of the rocks could mean great things for El Paso.
"After three years of asking and three years of looking, I'm convinced" this is something new, James said.
Erica Molina may be reached at emolina@elpasotimes.com; 546-6132.
Guess what? You can tell Lauralee that we really do sell rocks to each other.
Antediluvian artifacts?
LOL !!!
LOLOL. She won't believe it.
Cracker Jacks prizes?...:0)
I think I've seen them before at a Souvenir ship in Missouri. :-)
Looks like some sort of shell to me even before reading it was made of silica.
I have one of these. I was forced to pay 100 quatloos and give up my Orion slave girl to an Andorian trader. It was well worth it though. I spend many long nights shining a flashlight through it. It gives me a lot more pleasure than that Orion slave girl ever did (on Orion they have PMS for three weeks out of every month).
I got some fried mushrooms just like those once at Ponderosa.
These objects are sometimes called "casts" because the process works just like lost wax casting for jewelry or other objects using minerals instead of metals.
A tiny amount of uranium salts probably explain the fluorescence under ultraviolet light. Tiny and harmless amounts of uranium are commonly found in many rocks and minerals. The fact the objects keep on glowing for a time after the ultraviolet is turned off is called phosphorescence. It too is common in many rocks and minerals.
What the man has are fossils, just like much petrified wood is fossilized by the process of total replacement resulting in a false form of wood.
Hmm. Some sort of Tektite I'd think (Melted Rock expelled from an asteroid impact that hardens in flight before hitting the ground again.)
Looks to me like they are made out of Silica.
This is relatively close to White Sands and yards from the northern part of Ft Bliss. An area somewhat between Dona Ana and McGregor Ranges. Could this be leftovers from early nuke testing or a century of massive conventional weapons? I'm thinking something like fused sand clumps.
Dang I just read the article. I was RIGHT!
Years ago, Parade Magazine ran an article, with photos, that showed a geode with what appeared to be a sparkplug imbedded in it. Has anyone ever heard any more about it?
That was a Chevy Geo that had a spark plug in it.
Looks a lot like flint.
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