Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Sacred Datura

Sacred datura (Datura wrightii) growing in a canyon in the Galiuro Mountains.  Its luxurious blossom and alluring aroma belie the fact that it contains some of the most powerful and least understood hallucinogenic plant alkaloids known to us.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Ilimaussaq Complex

These fluorescent rocks come from the Ilimaussaq Complex, Greenland, a remote and rugged area of mountains and fjords along the southern coast of the island.

Bright orange sodalite under longwave UV. 3"x3"x2"
The purple in the photo is reflection from the lamp.

This is orange sodalite, pink-red tugtapite, and a fluorescent green that could be natrolite or another uranium activated mineral.  Shortwave UV. 3"x2"x1"
Tugtapite turns from pink to bright orange under longwave UV.
White light.  The hints of purple are an example of tenebrescence, a phenomenon by which certain minerals show a change in color after exposure to UV light.

Specimens purchased from Polman Minerals.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Foreign Fluorescents

Recently acquired some new fluorescent specimens not native to Arizona.

This is calcite from the Little 38 Mine in Terlingua, TX.  First picture shows response to shortwave UV.  Second picture is white light.  Under longwave UV the calcite glows rosy pink (not pictured).  2.5"x2"x1"  The calcite also attractively phosphorescent:

This is fluorescent red halite:
Also know as salt; from the Salton Sea, CA.  SWUV.  3"x2"x1"

Specimens purchased from Polman Minerals.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Desert Globemallow

Desert globemallow (Sphaeralcea ambigua) blooming in a wash near Mammoth.

Dead Rattler

A western diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox), lying dead along the side of a canyon road in the Black Hills, near the town of Mammoth.  Roughly 5 feet long.  Not sure how it died - the head looked crushed, and a large gash is visible along the middle of its back.  Desert decomposers were already hard at work - flies taking off and landing at regular intervals, and a steady highway of ants busily traversed the spine.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Catalina Clouds

Took a drive up Mount Lemmon-General Hitchcock highway just after a massive rainstorm moved through the area on Monday.  Seven Cataracts falls were flowing strong, and the cliffs above were cloaked with gray mist.

Once over the top and on Oracle Control Road, there were fluffy layers of clouds flowing through the canyons, and filling the San Pedro River valley.

Looking east across the San Pedro River valley from an elevation of roughly 6300'.
The distant Galiuro Mountains are visible in the photo along the horizon to the left.
The even more distant Pinaleno Mountains are also visible, just right of center.