Past Field Trips

Banded Green Jasper Field Trip

by Dion Stewart

It is wonderful when everything comes together as planned (and with some good luck); and as rare as that may be, it happened for us on our CCGMS field trip for banded green jasper (technically called “prase”) on Saturday, February 22nd. The weather, which was a perfect 67 degrees and sunny, soon had the twenty six participants stripping down to their short sleeves as they picked up rocks of all sizes off the ground surface and along the roads.

Twenty six members attended the trip (Photo by CR Munson)
Crazy lace with swirled patterns and vugs

Specimens were everywhere and included druzy quartz layers and vugs, swirled bands of crazy lace agate, and lots of jasper colors in alternating bands of green, brown, red, pink, and occasionally yellow. One member who is a teacher, found a boulder for her classroom that took three people to lift into her car; the boulder showed lace in one area, banded jasper in another, and druzy cavities in a third region. There was so much material in one area that we stopped looking for large specimens and collected a lot of 1 inch size pieces for the “grab bags” that we put out at our Annual Show.

Everyone was very considerate; we traveled in caravan from Summerville (no one got stuck), everyone filled the holes made when they dug up a boulder or cobble, they shared rides up the hill and exchanged specimens, and (happy for me as leader) everyone signed out of the region as they left by 3:30 pm. Many of the participants asked me to let the property owner and the head of the hunting club know how much they appreciated the opportunity to have visited this lovely site in the rolling hills of Chattooga County.

Banded Jasper
Tom and Bonnie move a boulder to their vehicle

Geologically this region is at the bottom of the Know Group, a Cambrian rock unit that is mostly made of dolomite from the Paleozoic Era of time. The bottom of this group is made up of the Copper Ridge Formation, which has been described in the literature as having a layer of “dense massive chert” in the lower 300 feet. The abundance of colored cherts here is the result of mineralized groundwater flowing through the bottom layers of the Copper Ridge dolomite. The dissolved silica in the waters replaced each thin bed of dolomite with microscopic colored quartz crystals to give us the colorful layers of jasper. The region was folded into a long anticline when the Appalachian Mountains formed nearly 300 million years ago.

These reports chronicle the details of the fun and adventure of seeking and finding your own rocks, minerals or fossils. Frequently, these trips are repeated. This makes this page a good reference site for future trips. Collecting location specifics won't be included in the report as they generally require special permission to collect. It's important that we protect the privacy of our site owners to avoid unwanted rockhounds searching on their property.

Cobb County Gem & Mineral Society