Part 0004 2008 2013 Minimalism NEW YEAR'S EVE THE BEST OF CWK TEXAS NEW MEX AZ BAJA CA LAPAZ
check ou Kennys art ate
, ... THE DOCUMENTARY best best of 2008 cruisinwithkenny is in New Mexico heading
to the geode kid 's world class thunder egg museum and much more Kenny get Haunted and meats all the dead relatives...
in a Solid waste from camping right near a Mexican headstone ... PS in his sleep he
Through spiritual research we have found that there are psychological and spiritual reasons for seeing dead family members in dreams. 30% of the time the reason is psychological and 70% of the time it is spiritual.
Psychological reasons can include a feeling of guilt or regret for not having spent time with a loved one before he/she died or some anxiety about that departed family member. Here the images that appear in the dream are eruptions from our sub-conscious mind.
Spiritual reasons are mainly two-fold. One is that the subtle body of the departed family member needs help in the afterlife and is trying to contact its descendant on the Earth plane of existence. The other reason is trying to seek revenge, to get even with some family member.meats all the dead relatives...the Collection of the Geode Kid
A Short History of the Collection at
the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum:
Split, shifted, and resilicified, from the Priday Ranch, OregonOur collection of thundereggs (lithophysae) is the largest and most complete, for variety of locations, in the world. The quality of the specimens displayed are the best from each location, selected from tens of thousands we have cut over 46 years of collecting. Over 100 locations of flawless specimens show how different each are from one another, so much so that a seasoned collector can identify, by sight, exactly where each egg came from.
Split and shifted by earth-faulting, this specimen was completely recemented with silica.
Author holding a large egg from Never Again Mine, Deming, NMI started collecting for variety of locations when, at age 15, I noticed that each deposit produced thundereggs uniquely different from site to site, and sometimes at different points in a single deposit. Through the years, I and my partner, Christopher Blackwell, researched geologic maps in college libraries nearest the areas we planned to prospect. By knowing the formations thundereggs occur in-- the presence of rhyolite as an immiscible component in perlite-- we greatly enhanced the success of our prospecting.
A large lithophysa from the Never Again Mine, Deming, New Mexico.
An unconformity in opal layers from Rockhound State Park, NMThe collection of the Geode Kid has been donated to the world-class Deming Luna Mimbres Museum in downtown Deming, New Mexico, so as to guarantee, in perpetuity, the educational context in which it is organized.
Diastrophic event recorded as an angular unconformity in the opal layers of this specimen from Rockhound State Park, near Deming, New Mexico.
Contents:
Home-page of the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
What Are Thundereggs (Lithophysae)?
Where To Find Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Dig Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Determine Proper Orientation for Successful Cutting
Baker Thunderegg Basics
Thundereggs For Sale
Where To Find the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum and Rockshop
You can e-mail us at
geodekid@zianet.com
Phone (575) 546-4021
You can snail-mail us at
Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
6235 Stirrup Rd SE
Deming, New Mexico 88030
For more information,
please refer to my book, The Formation of Thundereggs
by Robert Colburn, aka Paul, the Geode Kid.
This web page was created by Carlton J Donaghe and Bill Boomhower
All contents copyright © 1997 Robert Colburn. All rights reserved.
Part 0006 2008 2013 Minimalism NEW DAY NEW YEAR MOUNTAIN BIKING TEXAS NEW MEX AZ BAJA CA LAPAZ
check out Kennys art ate
, ... THE DOCUMENTARY best best of 2008 cruisinwithkenny is in New Mexico interview with the geode kid the Collection of the Geode Kid
A Short History of the Collection at
the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum:
Split, shifted, and resilicified, from the Priday Ranch, OregonOur collection of thundereggs (lithophysae) is the largest and most complete, for variety of locations, in the world. The quality of the specimens displayed are the best from each location, selected from tens of thousands we have cut over 46 years of collecting. Over 100 locations of flawless specimens show how different each are from one another, so much so that a seasoned collector can identify, by sight, exactly where each egg came from.
Split and shifted by earth-faulting, this specimen was completely recemented with silica.
Author holding a large egg from Never Again Mine, Deming, NMI started collecting for variety of locations when, at age 15, I noticed that each deposit produced thundereggs uniquely different from site to site, and sometimes at different points in a single deposit. Through the years, I and my partner, Christopher Blackwell, researched geologic maps in college libraries nearest the areas we planned to prospect. By knowing the formations thundereggs occur in-- the presence of rhyolite as an immiscible component in perlite-- we greatly enhanced the success of our prospecting.
A large lithophysa from the Never Again Mine, Deming, New Mexico.
An unconformity in opal layers from Rockhound State Park, NMThe collection of the Geode Kid has been donated to the world-class Deming Luna Mimbres Museum in downtown Deming, New Mexico, so as to guarantee, in perpetuity, the educational context in which it is organized.
Diastrophic event recorded as an angular unconformity in the opal layers of this specimen from Rockhound State Park, near Deming, New Mexico.
Contents:
Home-page of the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
What Are Thundereggs (Lithophysae)?
Where To Find Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Dig Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Determine Proper Orientation for Successful Cutting
Baker Thunderegg Basics
Thundereggs For Sale
Where To Find the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum and Rockshop
You can e-mail us at
geodekid@zianet.com
Phone (575) 546-4021
You can snail-mail us at
Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
6235 Stirrup Rd SE
Deming, New Mexico 88030
For more information,
please refer to my book, The Formation of Thundereggs
by Robert Colburn, aka Paul, the Geode Kid.
This web page was created by Carlton J Donaghe and Bill Boomhower
All contents copyright © 1997 Robert Colburn. All rights reserved. Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary museum
Home of the Baker Egg Mine
Agate nodules and crystal geodes, the finest in rarity and quality in the world!
My book, The Formation of Thundereggs, is finished
and is now available as both a hardcopy (soft cover) and as a CD!!
Click here for more information
Located two miles before Rockhound State Park on Rockhound Road (Highway 143)Baker Thunderegg with stalactites, Deming, New Mexico
6235 Stirrup Rd SE
Deming, New Mexico 88030
(575) 546-4021
Contents:
What Are Thundereggs (Lithophysae)?
Where To Find Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Dig Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
The Collection of the Geode Kid
How To Determine Proper Orientation for Successful Cutting
Baker Thunderegg Basics
Baker Thundereggs For Sale
Where To Find the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum and Rockshop
Contribution to Petrochemical-mineralogical Characterization of Alteration Processes within the Marginal Facies of Rhyolitic Volcanics of Lower Permian Age, Thuringian Forest, Germany
Baker egg with stunning agate colors and banding, Deming, New Mexico
Baker egg with incredible agate colors and banding, Deming, New Mexico Baker Thunderegg, Deming, New Mexico
Baker with great agate and dark crystals, Deming, New Mexico
Baker Egg within an Egg, Deming, New Mexico
Tilt agate thunderegg, Rockhound State Park, Deming, New Mexico
Sagenite in carnelian agate, Baker Egg Mine, Deming, New MexicoDetailed descriptions of rare and bizarre formations are provided with many of the specimens in the museum collection. In addition, we have a shop with fine thundereggs from many of the locations in the museum for sale-- geodes, nodules, and agate from New Mexico and the Western United States.
Phone (575) 546-4021
You can e-mail us at
geodekid@zianet.com
You can snail-mail us at
Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
6235 Stirrup Rd SE
Deming, New Mexico 88030
For more information,
please refer to my book, The Formation of Thunderegg
Part 0005 2008 2013 Minimalism NEW YEAR'S DAY MOUNTAIN BIKING TEXAS NEW MEX AZ BAJA CA LAPAZ
check out Kennys art ate
, ... THE DOCUMENTARY best best of 2008 cruisinwithkenny is in New Mexico heading
to the geode kid 's world class thunder egg museum and much more Kenny get Haunted and meats all the dead relatives...
in a Solid waste from camping right near a Mexican headstone ... PS in his sleep he
Through spiritual research we have found that there are psychological and spiritual reasons for seeing dead family members in dreams. 30% of the time the reason is psychological and 70% of the time it is spiritual.
Psychological reasons can include a feeling of guilt or regret for not having spent time with a loved one before he/she died or some anxiety about that departed family member. Here the images that appear in the dream are eruptions from our sub-conscious mind.
Spiritual reasons are mainly two-fold. One is that the subtle body of the departed family member needs help in the afterlife and is trying to contact its descendant on the Earth plane of existence. The other reason is trying to seek revenge, to get even with some family member.meats all the dead relatives...the Collection of the Geode Kid
A Short History of the Collection at
the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum:
Split, shifted, and resilicified, from the Priday Ranch, OregonOur collection of thundereggs (lithophysae) is the largest and most complete, for variety of locations, in the world. The quality of the specimens displayed are the best from each location, selected from tens of thousands we have cut over 46 years of collecting. Over 100 locations of flawless specimens show how different each are from one another, so much so that a seasoned collector can identify, by sight, exactly where each egg came from.
Split and shifted by earth-faulting, this specimen was completely recemented with silica.
Author holding a large egg from Never Again Mine, Deming, NMI started collecting for variety of locations when, at age 15, I noticed that each deposit produced thundereggs uniquely different from site to site, and sometimes at different points in a single deposit. Through the years, I and my partner, Christopher Blackwell, researched geologic maps in college libraries nearest the areas we planned to prospect. By knowing the formations thundereggs occur in-- the presence of rhyolite as an immiscible component in perlite-- we greatly enhanced the success of our prospecting.
A large lithophysa from the Never Again Mine, Deming, New Mexico.
An unconformity in opal layers from Rockhound State Park, NMThe collection of the Geode Kid has been donated to the world-class Deming Luna Mimbres Museum in downtown Deming, New Mexico, so as to guarantee, in perpetuity, the educational context in which it is organized.
Diastrophic event recorded as an angular unconformity in the opal layers of this specimen from Rockhound State Park, near Deming, New Mexico.
Contents:
Home-page of the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
What Are Thundereggs (Lithophysae)?
Where To Find Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Dig Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Determine Proper Orientation for Successful Cutting
Baker Thunderegg Basics
Thundereggs For Sale
Where To Find the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum and Rockshop
You can e-mail us at
geodekid@zianet.com
Phone (575) 546-4021
You can snail-mail us at
Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
6235 Stirrup Rd SE
Deming, New Mexico 88030
For more information,
please refer to my book, The Formation of Thundereggs
by Robert Colburn, aka Paul, the Geode Kid.
This web page was created by Carlton J Donaghe and Bill Boomhower
All contents copyright © 1997 Robert Colburn. All rights reserved.
Part 0007 2008 Minimalism MOUNTAIN BIKING TEXAS NEW MEX AZ BAJA CA LAPAZ MEX
check out Kennys art ate
, ... THE DOCUMENTARY best best of 2008 cruisinwithkenny is in New Mexico interview with the geode kid the Collection of the Geode Kid
A Short History of the Collection at
the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum:
Split, shifted, and resilicified, from the Priday Ranch, OregonOur collection of thundereggs (lithophysae) is the largest and most complete, for variety of locations, in the world. The quality of the specimens displayed are the best from each location, selected from tens of thousands we have cut over 46 years of collecting. Over 100 locations of flawless specimens show how different each are from one another, so much so that a seasoned collector can identify, by sight, exactly where each egg came from.
Split and shifted by earth-faulting, this specimen was completely recemented with silica.
Author holding a large egg from Never Again Mine, Deming, NMI started collecting for variety of locations when, at age 15, I noticed that each deposit produced thundereggs uniquely different from site to site, and sometimes at different points in a single deposit. Through the years, I and my partner, Christopher Blackwell, researched geologic maps in college libraries nearest the areas we planned to prospect. By knowing the formations thundereggs occur in-- the presence of rhyolite as an immiscible component in perlite-- we greatly enhanced the success of our prospecting.
A large lithophysa from the Never Again Mine, Deming, New Mexico.
An unconformity in opal layers from Rockhound State Park, NMThe collection of the Geode Kid has been donated to the world-class Deming Luna Mimbres Museum in downtown Deming, New Mexico, so as to guarantee, in perpetuity, the educational context in which it is organized.
Diastrophic event recorded as an angular unconformity in the opal layers of this specimen from Rockhound State Park, near Deming, New Mexico.
Contents:
Home-page of the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
What Are Thundereggs (Lithophysae)?
Where To Find Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Dig Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Determine Proper Orientation for Successful Cutting
Baker Thunderegg Basics
Thundereggs For Sale
Where To Find the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum and Rockshop
You can e-mail us at
geodekid@zianet.com
Phone (575) 546-4021
You can snail-mail us at
Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
6235 Stirrup Rd SE
Deming, New Mexico 88030
For more information,
please refer to my book, The Formation of Thundereggs
by Robert Colburn, aka Paul, the Geode Kid.
This web page was created by Carlton J Donaghe and Bill Boomhower
All contents copyright © 1997 Robert Colburn. All rights reserved. Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary museum
Home of the Baker Egg Mine
Agate nodules and crystal geodes, the finest in rarity and quality in the world!
My book, The Formation of Thundereggs, is finished
and is now available as both a hardcopy (soft cover) and as a CD!!
Click here for more information
Located two miles before Rockhound State Park on Rockhound Road (Highway 143)Baker Thunderegg with stalactites, Deming, New Mexico
6235 Stirrup Rd SE
Deming, New Mexico 88030
(575) 546-4021
Contents:
What Are Thundereggs (Lithophysae)?
Where To Find Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
How To Dig Thundereggs (Lithophysae)
The Collection of the Geode Kid
How To Determine Proper Orientation for Successful Cutting
Baker Thunderegg Basics
Baker Thundereggs For Sale
Where To Find the Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum and Rockshop
Contribution to Petrochemical-mineralogical Characterization of Alteration Processes within the Marginal Facies of Rhyolitic Volcanics of Lower Permian Age, Thuringian Forest, Germany
Baker egg with stunning agate colors and banding, Deming, New Mexico
Baker egg with incredible agate colors and banding, Deming, New Mexico Baker Thunderegg, Deming, New Mexico
Baker with great agate and dark crystals, Deming, New Mexico
Baker Egg within an Egg, Deming, New Mexico
Tilt agate thunderegg, Rockhound State Park, Deming, New Mexico
Sagenite in carnelian agate, Baker Egg Mine, Deming, New MexicoDetailed descriptions of rare and bizarre formations are provided with many of the specimens in the museum collection. In addition, we have a shop with fine thundereggs from many of the locations in the museum for sale-- geodes, nodules, and agate from New Mexico and the Western United States.
Phone (575) 546-4021
You can e-mail us at
geodekid@zianet.com
You can snail-mail us at
Basin Range Volcanics Geolapidary Museum
6235 Stirrup Rd SE
Deming, New Mexico 88030
For more information,
please refer to my book, The Formation of Thunderegg