Natural unopened Geodes; ethically sourced in central Kentucky. Varieties can include, but not limited to: •Quartz Crystal geodes •lapidary stones & nodules•hollow “rattlers” lined with crystals•druzy•botroydial crystals “starburst”/ “snowballs”•botroydial chalcedony •A variety of quartz colors can include but not limited to: blue, smokey, milky/ white, orange/ tangerine, carnelian/ ferruginous/ reds, pinks, clear, golden healer, yellow/ citrine, pale lavender +more•carnelian agate•raw clear quartz masses •fluorescents•fluorite•calcite •dogtooth calcite•agatized coral fossils & more!
https://www.wikihow.com/Crack-Open-a-Geode
“The interior of hollow geodes is filled with mineral crystals, which grow inward from the rind into the hollow space inside the geode. Most often, geodes found in Kentucky are lined with quartz crystals. Less commonly, the calcite or dolomite crystals are found on the inside, either alone or associated with bitumen, barite, galena, fluorite, limonite, sphalerite, pyrite, selenite, or celestite.”
Please visit uky.edu or Mindat.org for more details and information about the geodes and minerals that can be found in central Kentucky.
XL Geodes (6-9lb’s) Quartz Crystals- Unopened/ break your own
What type of geode are you trying to open?
A "rattler" or "break your own" is going to have a hollow cavity inside, lined with crystals or chalcedony.
A "geode" is partially hollow to completely solid, lined with crystals inside.
A "lapidary" geode will most likely be a solid geode, or have a small cavity.
A rock hammer, or pipe-cutter is best used for opening geodes you suspect to be hollow.
A rock-saw, or dedicated lapidary saw is the best tool for opening lapidary geodes.
