Jared Johnston

Jared Johnston

greenhouse update 3.26.21

greenhouse update 3.26.21

Kimberlite or Pudding stone?

Kimberlite or Pudding stone?

I like big rocks!

I like big rocks!

Modular fun...

Modular fun...

Scattered drums

Scattered drums

Groovy

Groovy

Modular jam

Modular jam

Lovelife

Lovelife

OCL8

OCL8

Making some noise...

Making some noise...

Live PA

Live PA

Double scoop

Double scoop

February 12, 2017

February 12, 2017

Bouncy

Bouncy

Bent  analog

Bent analog

Mother 32 weirdness

Mother 32 weirdness

A little jam session

A little jam session

Think quick (redo)

Think quick (redo)

R2D2 Moog Mother 32

R2D2 Moog Mother 32

Live improvised house music

Live improvised house music

Fun with a TB-3

Fun with a TB-3

Little groove

Little groove

A little live set

A little live set

Пікірлер

  • @erinkelley1943
    @erinkelley19432 ай бұрын

    And You DiVE? WTF. I am in love. Twinnie😂

  • @erinkelley1943
    @erinkelley19432 ай бұрын

    And then I see you are a DJ as well. CrAZY!!!😅 Ok CONFIRMED. You ARE the male version of me!

  • @erinkelley1943
    @erinkelley19432 ай бұрын

    I think you just might be the male version of me. Pretty sure. 😂

  • @AsaTrenchard1865
    @AsaTrenchard18652 ай бұрын

    Moved to NE Michigan recently. Here, you can legally collect up to 25 pounds of rocks per year from state parks. We have two state park rockhounding expeditions planned for this year. One is Sturgeon Point (Harrisville, betw Alpena and Oscoda), which has a mile-long gravel bar jutting out into Lake Huron that's chock full of fossils. The other is Rockport (north of Alpena), which features a mountain of quarry tailings, mostly fossils including Petoskeys, trilobites, and horn corals, many of which are free from their matrices. We'll be staying late to flash for Yooperlites 👍

  • @AsaTrenchard1865
    @AsaTrenchard18652 ай бұрын

    Puddingstone always has red (jasper) inclusions.

  • @dalehammond1749
    @dalehammond17493 ай бұрын

    My understanding of "Pudding stones" is that they all have a white to brown silicate matrix. Some claim only the clearly whites are true "Pudding stones." I'm not an expert so I generally attempt to follow those who make that claim. What I've seen in general thus far is organized confusion on the subject. But again there's the stong bent toward the opinion that true Kimberlites are very rare in Michigan. Quoting: "More than 20 kimberlites have been discovered since 1971, and these post- Ordovician intrusions follow a general northwest trend through Iron, Dickinson, and Menominee Counties from Crystal Falls to Hermansville. Many kimberlites in Northern Michigan contain diamonds, while some appear to be barren." End of quote. My point I guess is, stones like yours are very common in Michigan and most people call them "Pudding stones."

  • @robertotamesis1783
    @robertotamesis17833 ай бұрын

    Pudding stones in Africa are most common .

  • @joshgoostree1825
    @joshgoostree18254 ай бұрын

    Look whats on it

  • @canadiangemstones7636
    @canadiangemstones76364 ай бұрын

    Almost every word is incorrect... do more research.

  • @user-wq7zg3vw1r
    @user-wq7zg3vw1r4 ай бұрын

    Nice very helpful video and I added this plane

  • @user-bw3gm1yw9u
    @user-bw3gm1yw9u5 ай бұрын

    Are you sure those aren't petrified bones

  • @user-bw3gm1yw9u
    @user-bw3gm1yw9u5 ай бұрын

    Looks like a joint bone

  • @Abloutions
    @Abloutions6 ай бұрын

    the pudding stone looks to be a conglomerate.. all the stones in there are rounded which screams deposited from a river source

  • @zainazmanabdaziz
    @zainazmanabdaziz6 ай бұрын

    That's big Kimberlite.

  • @rainacherienne1010
    @rainacherienne10107 ай бұрын

    Best explanation. My work offers this and I wondered if it’s something worth considering or totally useless. So it’s a good option but I’ll skip for now, don’t really want any extra costs per month while I’m still young, even if it’s a few dollars it adds up.

  • @vicbertfartingclack4559
    @vicbertfartingclack45598 ай бұрын

    Sorry. That is a classic jasper quartzite Puddingstone from the Lorrain formation, Huronian Supergroup. Yes, good ones often do contain that many clasts - not formed by lava - sedimentary to metamorphic. Not diamond. Not Kimberlite. The other greenish one, sure could be kimberlite.

  • @user-ce6fr1qm3h
    @user-ce6fr1qm3h8 ай бұрын

    tem algum brazileiro aqui da joinha nessa porra

  • @pablo6305
    @pablo63058 ай бұрын

    If it has jasper its suposed to be pudding stone. Have you noticed lately ,everyone has been interested in stones.weird. i have ten to twenty hobbies. I dont have room time for pudding collection, yet i am drawn to 9ne spot that i find pudding stones by the thousands. Im going to have to get a dolly.. good hunting fellas. Im gonna be known as the pudding-stoner.... the one with red is a conglomorite which is a puding stone due to the jasper. Kimberlites are for.ed inside conglomerite. I believe. Not certain

  • @emilio3769
    @emilio376911 ай бұрын

    Yeah I've found plenty of the light colored with bright reds and different colors in them. I new it had to be some kind of gems with all the obsidian around.

  • @emilio3769
    @emilio376911 ай бұрын

    I have one now about 4×5 inch cluster of it.. thousands of different rocks/crystals colors throughout it. But how to extract them??

  • @deannekliene2673
    @deannekliene267311 ай бұрын

    Triangle is a red flag for diamonds is my understanding....

  • @SydidIt
    @SydidIt Жыл бұрын

    Omg another central Mi rock enthusiasts! Manifest destiny?

  • @ericleebowenchamberlain4223
    @ericleebowenchamberlain4223 Жыл бұрын

    P.s. all stones are serpent puking out every orphis of its mother. There all clutches. Keep up good work. 2 years ahead

  • @joebacus8763
    @joebacus8763 Жыл бұрын

    hey bud, what i know about kimberlites is that they are filled with different raw tiny stones within the rocks and they are visible but yes at 6:30 are kimberlites👍👍

  • @phsx2890
    @phsx2890 Жыл бұрын

    U talking about Medicare gap or supplements for 65 yr old…mostly?

  • @amaraiyambanedwingemstone
    @amaraiyambanedwingemstone Жыл бұрын

    Big Kimberli....nice In my video I also show Kimberly stones and the crystals attached to the stones are so large that I wonder if this is a diamond or an ordinary crystal

  • @johngreen4610
    @johngreen4610 Жыл бұрын

    Jared why don"t you take a weekend trip to Lake Ellen in (da UP). It's just a few miles north of Channing MI. There is a Kimberlite pipe up there that was discovered about 1980. It contains no diamonds but you can learn a lot about kimberlites there. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Ellen_Kimberlite I wrote the article for Wikipedia.

  • @melodyfalle5708
    @melodyfalle5708 Жыл бұрын

    Ser good pm

  • @Eoj633
    @Eoj633 Жыл бұрын

    All your rock's were carved by natives.. I'm an avid collector and Hunter myself I study the images and try to piece together the art and origin of the stone's I collect.. make sure to always thank the spirits 🙏

  • @abcdef-kq2zg
    @abcdef-kq2zg Жыл бұрын

    There is a textbook from the U of M that tells everything about Mich geology. It is called "Geology of Michigan", by Dorr and Eschman. A used copy isn't that much money. I have studied it for years. I think that you would enjoy the knowledge it brings. Your local library probably has copies available also.

  • @bigonaka8159
    @bigonaka8159 Жыл бұрын

    I find myself looking at different rocks and picking them up and polishing them. My family thinks my cheese slid off the cracker so to speak. So I find your video very interesting and good to see someone else infected with the same symptoms i have.

  • @marylynnsstory
    @marylynnsstory Жыл бұрын

    Good to know I'm not the only one!

  • @lightnsight980
    @lightnsight980 Жыл бұрын

    And I'm sure ya doing out by now, but try and scratch conundrum rock( ruby/saffire grow in) it's really only thing that will, and is one step down in hardness then diamond. /kimberlite 😎

  • @lightnsight980
    @lightnsight980 Жыл бұрын

    That's awesome, nice to see others that are all in and wanna know what they ( rocks / crystals) ha , keep it up and hope that you found your answers ...and kimberlite can be white too I guess, looking myself, how I found this video , so thank you. I recently did a yard dig, found some really neat stuff too.

  • @gwenfify
    @gwenfify Жыл бұрын

    Just place the kimberlite rocks with diamonds in lemon juice for a 3-5 days then just with a glove on your hand crush it to remove the diamonds from it's soften platinum ore settlement or just shake the container to have it fall apart to separate the diamonds

  • @audreysuite
    @audreysuite Жыл бұрын

    Very helpful. I just added it to my coverage

  • @carenallen5841
    @carenallen5841 Жыл бұрын

    I found a large pudding stone in a farmers. Field MIDLAND MICHIGAN…and I have one just like the pinkish beige with smaller stone in it burgundy stones. Kimberlite

  • @caseyphillips7224
    @caseyphillips7224 Жыл бұрын

    The first ones look.like bone.

  • @Ramal26
    @Ramal26 Жыл бұрын

    Answered my question...Thanks Jared, very informative video!

  • @muhammadawalhidayat8143
    @muhammadawalhidayat8143 Жыл бұрын

    Anda pasti sekarang bersyukur atas gunung api yg meletus mengeluarkan materi seperti itu dari dalam perut bumi tanpa susah payah menambang lahan yg begitu besar yg merusak kekuatan dan keindahan alam ini...setelah lahar dingin dan banjir bandang anda bisa mendapatkan nya..🙏👌😁

  • @colleendeis928
    @colleendeis928 Жыл бұрын

    I’ve been reading up on kimberlites and maar - diatremes and I have ran into the same issues identifying what I’m finding. I have found similar rocks to the lighter one you have and I can’t really tell if it’s just a hunk of old concrete or volcanic breccia. I need the fancy equipment that scientists use to run chemical and isotopic analysis! 😂

  • @space.invaders
    @space.invaders Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting. I just got back from Northern Michigan, Gaylord area. I found a bunch of rocks I suspect are kimberlite and also 6 good size "pudding stones" Hmm. I already have some rocks in acid some smashed with a sledge and I have the loose material under the microscope at this very moment. Just an FYI, Diamond has 4 sides and quarts crystal has 6 sides.

  • @KGB.83
    @KGB.83 Жыл бұрын

    What do you mean? Pretty sure a diamond would just look like a chunk of clearish transparent mineral.. lol

  • @space.invaders
    @space.invaders Жыл бұрын

    @@KGB.83 Wow pfft lol, not under a microscope. Thats what I mean. So you think diamond looks like a chunk of clearish transparent mineral? You dont know much about crystallin structure do you. Pretty sure you do not know anything about diamond. Where have you ever seen a chunk of diamond? Minerals have structure to them with shapes that have sides and raw uncut diamond has 4 sides. Duuurrr....

  • @OpalholicsAnonymous
    @OpalholicsAnonymous Жыл бұрын

    8:00 some Canadian Kimberlite does look like that, the tone of the host rock is right. If its been deposited by a glacier from Canada, then you could be right. With the Glacier paths, if you map from your region to where the glaciers came from. You can find placer deposits of gems and mineral. And with canada being such a large source of diamonds. Its not unheard of.

  • @OpalholicsAnonymous
    @OpalholicsAnonymous Жыл бұрын

    Lamprophyre, Lamproite, and kimberlites can all host diamonds btw. I read a great little article post about it.

  • @OpalholicsAnonymous
    @OpalholicsAnonymous Жыл бұрын

    Harald G. Dill Leibniz Universität Hannover Dear colleagues, another answer from the point of view of an economic geologist: 1. Lamproite-group rocks are dark-colored magmatic rocks enriched in K and Mg and hypabyssal or effusive in origin. Lamproites are peralkaline ultrapotassic Mg-enriched magmatic rocks with all hallmarks of ultrabasic rocks such as elevated Cr and Ni contents ( Mitchell 1991). They may contain leucite, phlogopite, and glass (fizroyite), plogopite, diopside, leucite (wyomingite) or phenocrysts of diopside and phlogopite in a fine-grained glassy matrix which chemically can be approximated to the composition of leucite (madupite). They may also contain amphibole, olivine, sanidine, spinel, apatite and nepheline together with some wadeite and priderite. 2. Kimberlite-group rocks are close to porphyritic alkaline peridotites. They contain phenocrysts of olivine which frequently serpentinized, phlogopite converted into chlorite, geikelite (= "Mg ilmenite"), and. chromian pyrope-enriched garnet. They float in a fine-grained matrix of calcite, olivine, and phlogopite (2 nd gen.). Accessory minerals are ilmenite, magnetite, spinel, monticellite, apatite and perovskite. Chrome diopside mineralization in kimberlites is an important guide to diamond deposits. Kimberlite is by definition a K-enriched ultramafic rock which derived from a depth of more than 150 km below surface (Clement and Skinner 1985, Kirkley et al. 1991). Moving upwards, the hypabyssal intrusions grade into diatreme breccias and pyroclastic rocks 3. Lamprophyre-group magmatic rocks are dark-colored like the afore-mentioned subcrustal rocks abundant in biotite, hornblende, pyroxene, present as phenocrysts in a fine-grained matrix of K and Na/Ca feldspar and/ or feldspathoids. According to the abundance of these minerals mentioned above they are subdivided into minette, kersantite, spessartite, camptonite, monchiquite, fourchite and alnoite. No 1 - rocks are host of diamonds predominantly in Western Australia. No-2- rocks are host of diamonds predominantly in Tanzania, Botswana, Angola, DR Congo, South Africa, Russia, Lesotho, Canada, Zimbabwe, Greenland, Gabon (metakimberlites) No -3 - rocks gave besides diamonds (Michipicoten and Abitibi greenstone belts) also host to sapphire in Yogo Gulch, Montana, USA. It takes an outstanding position as it is bound to lamprophyre dykes classified as ouachitite ,a biotite monchiquite devoid of olivine with a glassy or analcime-bearing groundmass. Best regards Harald G.Dill

  • @OpalholicsAnonymous
    @OpalholicsAnonymous Жыл бұрын

    5:42 the luster on that crystal is intriguing. Depending on its hardness ot could be a hit. Maybe not a diamond. But it looked clean

  • @izzyangerman7604
    @izzyangerman76042 жыл бұрын

    My friend I thank you for helping me to realize that I’m not a madman. I went through the same strange obsession over the past couple of years and it led me to a whole new world. I am not a geologist by degree but I agree with other comments that the one looked like a bone of sorts, one looked like it could’ve been jade, and the green stone did look like kimberlite which I too have stumbled upon here in CO. Mostly though the main lesson I’ve taken from my obsession is how many artifacts are out there. Now I don’t know if they are artifacts because some amazing ancient civilization made them or if the Great Spirit created them but they have a story and something tells me you have a calling to help humanity through something big. Trust yourself and follow your heart🤟

  • @nyurieisbal1389
    @nyurieisbal13892 жыл бұрын

    i added this to my benefits after listening to this.

  • @gerardovictorperezperez8929
    @gerardovictorperezperez89292 жыл бұрын

    Hola usted me podría decir cómo se llama esta piedra

  • @thomasjohnson3082
    @thomasjohnson30822 жыл бұрын

    Have you not tried a diamond selector to test as they sit? I'd start there. Mohs hardness scale.

  • @lisamarielindsay2336
    @lisamarielindsay23362 жыл бұрын

    Dude that one with the Quartz is full of gold! you can see it easily on the big tv. You commented on how heavy it was!!!

  • @OpalholicsAnonymous
    @OpalholicsAnonymous Жыл бұрын

    5:01 ? The one with little nugget looking things?

  • @brcarter1111
    @brcarter11112 жыл бұрын

    The veins of crystals you see are called dikes. Dikes form when silica-rich motlen rock flows through cracks/fractures in another type of stone, producing veins of crystalline rock. If crystals are very large and visible (phaneritic), this means the liquid magma cooled very slowly because it was deep under the earth where it stayed hot. If you see small crystals, the magma cooled very fast above the earth's surface (aphanetic). The pattern of rock you see if from weathering, where motion and chemical weathering eroded the metamorphic rock much faster than it did the quartz crystals, causing them to stick out. If you live in Michigan, those rocks were probably deposited there about 20-30 thousand years ago as they fell out of the melting glaciers. They look like rock that is typical of the Canadian shield, pushed south by glaciers and glacial flow.

  • @tarfeathered791
    @tarfeathered7912 жыл бұрын

    Puddingstones are formed when rhyolitic type rocks get crushed and quarts type minerals fill in between the smashed rock. Somehow the crystalization of the filler between the rocks squeezes them apart. Otherwise the crushed rocks would still be close together. The green rock doesn't look like crushed rocks filled with quartz. It looks like a kimberlite chunk. Did you really find that in Montcalm county? It must have hitched a ride on a glacier from Ontario.

  • @tarfeathered791
    @tarfeathered7912 жыл бұрын

    The green rock is a good candidate for a kimberlite. The puddingstone is a puddingstone.