The first Post in this Series is here.
Day Nine, Thursday 25 February – Spent another couple of hours at Gemstone Beach this morning. The day was cloudy but calm, about 12 degrees. The photos that follow are of four stones and the process of discovery – the first photo of each set is of the stone on the beach amongst its surrounds (can you spot what I spotted?), then a closer view of the stone is presented, followed by a copy of the first photo with the stone circled, then finally photos of both sides of the stone.
The second stone is a green quartzite:
The next stone is pink, a thulite stone:
Thulite is the pink to reddish variety of the mineral zoisite. As Minerals.net reports, “The color of thulite is caused by the element manganese in its composition. Thulite often occurs associated with quartz, and is sometimes mottled with streaks or spots of white quartz.”
The fourth and final stone is of a type often found on Gemstone Beach:
Day Ten, Friday 26 February – Today, on my way to Gemstone Beach I made detours to Tihaka Beach and Garden Bay. These two beaches are to the south of the main road between Riverton and Gemstone Beach. Tihaka Beach is at the eastern end of the six kilometre-long sweep of Colac Bay beach. Many of the stones here are small, many are iron-stained or stained by the tannin of local creeks. Large parts of the beach have very small stones. Many of the types of stones found on Gemstone Beach are not often found here, one exception in my experience being trace fossil stones.
I stopped off briefly at “The Trees”, the surfing spot on Colac Bay beach, a couple of kilometres west of Tihaka. The beach stones are largely similar, and I found a small stone of interest there.
Twenty kilometres from Tihaka Beach is Garden Bay. Garden Bay is not even on Google Maps, though “Garden Road Southland” is, and the Bay is where the road meets the coast. Used as a quiet bay to launch recreational boats, it is sheltered from the strong swells of Foveaux Strait. Despite the small strips of beach, fossicking is more productive here than at Tihaka Beach. However, again the diversity and richness of Gemstone Beach stones are lacking.
After a brief walk at the head of Garden Bay, I had a fossick on a narrow strip of stony beach along the eastern shore.
Next stop, Gemstone Beach. I spent a couple of hours there. I will show the best nine of my finds. Here are the first three:
Here are the other six:
Day 11 (McCracken’s Rest) and Day 12 (Gemstone Beach) are to be found in the next Post in this Series.