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Nice haul John. I'm fixin to be needin some more rock myself. dpg
Tabular stone? I'd leave my boots in the mud before I'd leave one stone! Nice haul my friend.
John, do you seem to find better rock in high clay soils, ie. Less fractured, higher silica content?Tracy
Hello all:I thought you might be interested in some chert exposure maps I am creating for Iowa. I am doing it one county at a time and have Henry and Washington counties done. I am working on Louisa County right now. It takes awhile to publish each map because I am ground-truthing as I go. You can go to www.rollinghillsconsulting.com and click on County Chert Maps to access them. If you follow RHCS on Facebook, you will be notified when the next map is up.Hope this is helpful!ChadVery cool! Know anyone doing similar work in IL or IN?Tracy
Interesting. The better hornstone nodules I find are packed in clay so to speak and have little to no fractures compared to the recently exposed chert by flooding. Thanks for the input to my working theory/understanding of better quality chert.Tracy