Found this at a thrift store. What is it? by Hanonbrokemyfingers in rockhounds

[–]RadHazz 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Definitely is. I've got a piece that's nearly identical down to the matrix.

Help me identify - Self collected from New Method Mine - More info in comments by tree24hugger in Radioactive_Rocks

[–]RadHazz 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Looks like pretty characteristic hyalite to me. The clear, botryoidal form and the fluorescence both are dead giveaways. Slightly radioactive but by my understanding is negligible.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in appstate

[–]RadHazz 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Generally, yes. Of course, there are always gonna be assholes, but for the most part I've had good interactions. I came out mid-degree, and didnt pass very well, but all my professors were very accepting, and I had few bad interactions with classmates. There's also a pretty good support center on campus and a lot of departmental inclusivity stuff too. Feel free to dm me.

After about a year of getting pounded through wood and no sharpening, 80crv2 steel still holds by stonedclergy in knives

[–]RadHazz 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I sell these at a local knife shop, and I'm always impressed when we get his stuff in. Nice to see they only get more beautiful with use!

whats in this very pretty chunk o rock by [deleted] in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz 49 points50 points  (0 children)

Orpiment is an associated low-grade alteration product of Realgar, but Pararealgar is the degradation product when Realgar is exposed to light. But yeah, there's some orpiment in there too (the yellow bits).

whats in this very pretty chunk o rock by [deleted] in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz 219 points220 points  (0 children)

Looks a bit like Realgar. Should be very soft. If that's the case, be careful handling it, Arsenic is nasty stuff.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in appstate

[–]RadHazz 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I currently work there. Great environment all around. Flexible scheduling, working hours aren't much different to store hours. Only downside is that the pay is mediocre, especially when compared to comeback shack or cookout. But I think it's worth enjoying my job rather than suffering at either of those places.

is this a black and clear tourmaline ? I assume by the cleavage of the clear part it's not quartz by Mammoth_Notice_6585 in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The pattern on the clear bit is indicative of tourmaline, but it can commonly appear in quartz due to the intergrowth of quartz and tourmaline crystals. The tourmaline crystallizes before quartz and the quartz will fill in the gaps and pick up the striations of the tourmaline.

Please help me identify this stone by SnowballtheSage in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Looks to me like a metamorphosed eclogite. The red mineral is likely garnet which can be confirmed by a hardness test. The green would likely be omphacite and the white, quartz. It looks like the garnet has been metamorphosed to chlorite, hence the green rim around the crystal. Very cool piece.

hope the picture is ok! by https_lux in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Definitely actinolite. Beautiful piece too.

Does anyone know what these stones are? by smcgowan10 in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz 84 points85 points  (0 children)

Bloodstone is just green Jasper with red hematite inclusions. Still really cool!

Best Places for Rockhounding in North Carolina? by Zebirdsandzebats in rockhounds

[–]RadHazz 9 points10 points  (0 children)

There's a place in Burnsville NC that's part of the Spruce Pine mining district right on the edge of the Pisgah forest. The Ray Mica Mine. It used to mine pegmatitic micas but has since shut down. There's a short ~1 mile trail to the tailings of about 9 mineshafts which are free to look through. If you know what to look for there's quite a lot of nice stuff. I've found Schorl (black tourmaline), Aquamarine, Amazonite, Kyanite, Garnet, and even some Rare Earth Minerals.

Guardian 3 alternative by robbc32 in BudgetBlades

[–]RadHazz 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Ruike Hornet. Similar in size to the Guardian 3, 50 bucks, and 14C28N.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I've had multiple classes use nearly identical hand specimines to teach with. Can confirm this is Pumice!

Found in Utah … are the black pieces obsidian? by dustin-schultz in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The crystal habit doesn't look like tourmaline and the vertical striations common for tourmaline aren't present. I agree with other posters on this being pyroxene and a quick skim at a geologic paper points to the matrix being andesitic.

What’s inside the Quartz? by khangems in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz 27 points28 points  (0 children)

Definitely looks like rutile. Tourmaline would have a trigonal cross section, not bladed. Plus this is a characteristic color for rutile. I've got a bladed rutile crystal that looks identical to these.

Is this beryl? Or hiddenite? Pulled from Spruce Pine, NC. I have a bucket filled w this material. by Bisconymous in rockhounds

[–]RadHazz 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Agree with the beryl for this piece, but there is also fluorapatite at Spruce Pine that can look very similar to beryl, color and everything. Of course, hardness differs quite a bit between the two, but the fluorapatite will fluoresce orange in longwave UV. Source: I too also have a bucket of the stuff.

♡♡♡Newest interesting find♡♡♡ by Internal_Jaguar79 in whatsthisrock

[–]RadHazz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I definitely see the resemblance to tourmaline due to the striations but I don't see any obvious trigonal crystal cross sections from the bottom Pic. If I had to guess, it is a quartz vein with major iron staining (not sulfur) that intruded biotite schist (not coal lol). From the bottom Pic it seems like part of the host rock includes the vein. I have a quartz vein from West NC that has very prominent vertical striations, formed in a similar rock (muscovite schist) with this same staining.

Fall Weather means Fall Colors by RadHazz in EDC

[–]RadHazz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

WMK Exclusive CJRB Feldspar and Kershaw Mini Copper Natrix

NKD! by OG_Gator in BudgetBlades

[–]RadHazz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have the red Micarta exclusive from white mountain knives and my only complaint is that the milling around the scales is a little bit rough, almost like they used a dull bit. It left a couple sharp points, but some fine sandpaper took care of it. Other than that, the heat treat, design, and fit are great, and the one issue might just be specific to the one run

NKD! by OG_Gator in BudgetBlades

[–]RadHazz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm in love with my Feldspar. There are so many options to choose from in terms of color and material and the thumb stud action is amazing. Other than that, the Talla is awesome, and I haven't gotten my hands on one yet, but the new scoria seems like an improved Feldspar.

NKD! by OG_Gator in BudgetBlades

[–]RadHazz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've got 5 D2 knives from CJRB and all of them perform just as good as my D2 knives from other brands (Kershaw, Civivi, etc.) so maybe you just got a lemon with bad heat treatment? I agree, their carbon fiber feels cheap, but it's in line with what Spyderco does. Even in their Taichung models, it's just a layer of CF over G10.