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We hopped in the car and took a jog down to Nephi, then drove down hwy 132 through the West Hills (not the ones in L.A.) to Lynndyl. We passed the two pioneer charcoal kilns -- they look like beehives -- and then took a short jog down to Delta.
Delta was built as an agricultural investment around 1910, and they still provide a significant portion of the nation's alfalfa. It is strange to be somewhere so flat and green, and think that you are still in Utah (you're actually in the Great Basin). The road running NW out of Delta goes to the Brush-Wellman Beryllium mine, and there are many mineral operations based in Delta.
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We drove on into town, and our first stop was The Bug House, a rock shop owned by Loy Crapo. He owns the Dugway geode claim, U-Dig Trilobites, and a Septarian claim in Orderville. The shop is actually next to his house. We admired the barrels of rough outside and he came out to open the shop. Loy is a very nice guy. We talked rocks for awhile, he showed us a bunch of interesting stuff, and we ended up buying a few things we couldn't live without. I got a septarian slab, and another for my uncle. We also got a few fossils from Morocco. He showed us some sunstones and told us how to find them. He gave us good deals on everything, and we promised we'd tell all our friends about his place. It was hard to peel myself out of the shop, and then I had to pass by the barrels of rough on the way to the car. But we had our own rocks to find. We grabbed a quick lunch at a cafe and headed through town.
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We headed out of town and turned south on hwy 257. Delta sprawls out over the countryside, but is sparsely populated. As you drive out of town you feel like you're heading to the edge of the world. We passed Fort Deseret, just four adobe walls on the side of the road. After that you are following a train track in the middle of nowhere. A few miles later we saw the sign for Sunstone Knoll, crossed the train tracks, and drove around the south side of the hill.
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We didn't really know where to look, just that the east side was better. We drove into this little cove with a huge rock standing in the middle. It looked like someone had placed it there, like an Easter Island statue. We got out of the car and started looking around. The rock was crumbly, and there were little white and yellow crystals in it. Very pretty little things. They weren't large, but I couldn't keep from staring at them when I found them. You can find little tumbled ones on the ground in the gravel. They are very bright and iridescent, especially when the sun shines on them. If you want to break open the asphalt-looking rock you can find larger ones. I saw a few that were a half inch wide, but still no more than 1/8 or 1/4 inch thick. I think there was something voodoo about the things - I couldn't take my eyes off them. I was down on all fours, my face inches off the ground, picking them out of the gravel. They definitely weren't as large as I had imagined. I got about a handful of them, picking them off the ground and dropping them in a water bottle. By then it was time to go home, so I reluctantly got back in the car.
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Sunstone is a yellow form of labradorite, a volcanic feldspar glass. It is the state gem or Oregon, and you can get some very beautiful faceted ones from there. The color ranges from white to yellow, to red, but you can have multicolor inclusions that range all over the place.
2 comments:
Thank You for your information.. I will use it this summer 2008 when we visit the area .. my gradson and I both like rocks and the sunstone knoll looks very promising on the web so we will detour off the interstate to visit.. Thanks Again Gma
We are now using this post. Thank you so much. Found ourselves in Utah and we're looking for places to hunt rocks. This post was very helpful
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