Petoskey stones | Rock & Gem Magazine https://www.rockngem.com Rock & Gem Magazine Tue, 08 Aug 2023 21:40:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://www.rockngem.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/cropped-Favicon-32x32.jpg Petoskey stones | Rock & Gem Magazine https://www.rockngem.com 32 32 Petoskey Stones: Where & How to Find Them https://www.rockngem.com/what-are-petoskey-stones/ Mon, 07 Aug 2023 10:00:20 +0000 https://www.rockngem.com/?p=15405 Petoskey stones are a popular Lake Michigan beach find along with beach glass and Yooperlites. To paleontologists, this coral truly does not become a “Petoskey Stone” until someone slices and polishes it (and charges people lots of money for it). Then it becomes a Petoskey Stone. In its rough natural form, it is really a piece […]

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Petoskey stones are a popular Lake Michigan beach find along with beach glass and Yooperlites. To paleontologists, this coral truly does not become a “Petoskey Stone” until someone slices and polishes it (and charges people lots of money for it). Then it becomes a Petoskey Stone. In its rough natural form, it is really a piece of Hexagonaria coral.

Beautiful Petoskey Stones

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Walking along the northern Lower Peninsula shorelines of Lake Huron and Lake Michigan, it is easy to see this fossil’s natural attraction on people. Looking into the water, one can sometimes see this coral, rounded by relentless waves, worn smooth showing its beautiful internal structure. It is easy to see that rockhounds, jewelry makers and almost everyone would be taken by this attractive fossil.

Once removed from the water, however, it quickly dries and loses its bright polished shine. To achieve that permanent shine, it is necessary to polish the rock by grinding and sanding it and finishing it with a polishing compound to bring out the beautiful luster of the stone.

What Corals Make Petoskey Stones?

Petoskey stones are fossilized corals. There are at least nine species of Hexagonaria, but the only true Petoskey Stone is the H. percarinata. These corals are marine organisms that are made up of many, sometimes thousands of hard calcium carbonate exoskeletons called corallites. Each corallite contains a polyp – an individual multi-cellular animal.

There are two major types of corals – solitary corals growing by themselves, and colonial corals, growing in a tight community of genetically identical polyps. The polyp is the actual living individual creature that inhabits each corallite. As the coral grows, it extends the calcium carbonate exoskeleton and seals off part of the base.

Symbiotic Relationships

Corals live in a symbiotic relationship with a variety of marine algae. Although corals have stinging tentacles and are able to capture food such as zooplankton, the algae provide the energy corals need to survive.

Food is captured by tentacles and brought down to the center where the mouth and stomach are located. The algae use a process called photosynthesis to provide additional energy to the coral polyp. In turn, the hard calcium carbonate exoskeleton of the coral and stinging tentacles provide protection for the algae.

The coral polyp produces waste products that the algae needs for its survival. Because sunlight is needed for the algae’s photosynthesis processes and sunlight only penetrates the ocean to a certain depth, corals normally grow in shallow waters from 30 to 150 feet.

Hexagonaria Coral

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Hexagonaria colony as found inland, Northern Lower Peninsula, Michigan.

Hexagonaria coral is a colonial marine animal that lived in warm shallow salt-water tropical seas. Prehistoric Michigan was once such an environment. During the Devonian Period some 419 -358 million years ago, Michigan was located much closer to the equator.

Much of Michigan’s bedrock is made up of huge limestone beds that underlie the surface soil. These large tracts of limestone bedrock are the remains of ancient coral reefs that filled the sea that once covered what is now Michigan. Ancient coral seas were full of a variety of creatures that included but were not limited to, corals -both solitary and colonial.

Each corallite of the Hexagonaria is made of a sometimes five but usually six-sided compartment which adjoined the others in the colony and created the elaborate six-sided hexagon. The radiating lines one sees in the Petoskey Stone are the septa and theca. The septa are the lines of division between each corallite and the theca are the internal radiating lines. These patterns of hexagon shapes and radiating lines are what will gives the Petoskey Stone its uniqueness among rocks.

Finding Petoskey Stones

The Hexagonaria are found across Michigan along lakeshores and rivers in the sediments commonly called the Traverse group. They are rounded fragments of the coral Hexagonaria. Some of these coral reefs still lie beneath the ground and some under the water of Little Traverse Bay.

Because of the wave and abrasive action of the sand, these stones are rounded and washed up on the beach. The action of ice moving also brings these stones into shallow water. The best time to hunt for Petoskey stones is in the spring as soon as the ice melts. But beware, it is a cold time to search! I have seen locals donning dry suits and walking in waist-deep water as ice floats by and picking up the stones before they even reach the shore.

How Did Petoskey Stones Get Their Name?

The name Petoskey is said to come from an old Odawa Indian legend. It is said that a French fur trader, Antoine Carre, came to Michigan traveling extensively in the area now known as Petoskey where he met and married an Odawa princess. In time, he was adopted by the local Odawa tribe and eventually was made their chief.

It is further told that in the spring of 1787 traveling with his wife on his way from near present-day Chicago, he camped near what is now Kalamazoo. During the night, his wife gave birth to a son. Legend says that as the morning sun rose, the sun’s rays fell upon the infant’s face, and his father pronounced his name shall be Petosegay. The translation of the Odawa Petosegay means sunbeam or rising sun or rays of dawn.

Petosegay became a fur trader like his father and also became quite wealthy. He owned much land in the Petoskey area, and a community was settled on the shores of Little Traverse Bay. The present location of the city of Petoskey stands as a tribute to Petosegay. Because these rounded and water-tumbled fossils were found in great abundance on the shores of Little Traverse Bay, they became known as Petoskey stones.

Becoming a State Stone

The Petoskey stone was made the state stone of Michigan by legislative action. Then-Governor George Romney signed House Bill 2297 in 1965. This legislation elevated this fossil to the prestigious position it now holds around the world. For visitors to the Great Lakes, a Petoskey stone find is often a must-do!

This story about Petoskey stones appeared in the September 2021 issue of Rock & Gem magazine. Click here to subscribe! Story by Joseph “Paleo Joe” Kchodl.  

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8 Rocks Found on Lake Michigan Beaches https://www.rockngem.com/8-rocks-lake-michigan-beaches/ Mon, 24 Jul 2023 10:00:46 +0000 https://www.rockngem.com/?p=21395 Lake Michigan beaches are home to the nation’s longest freshwater coastline (3,288 linear miles). Michigan is surrounded by four of the five Great Lakes (Superior, Michigan, Huron and Erie) making hunting for beach finds a rockhound’s dream. Michigan’s coasts are varied with sandy beaches and dunes, wetlands and rocky cliffs and bluffs. There’s always something […]

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Lake Michigan beaches are home to the nation’s longest freshwater coastline (3,288 linear miles). Michigan is surrounded by four of the five Great Lakes (Superior, Michigan, Huron and Erie) making hunting for beach finds a rockhound’s dream. Michigan’s coasts are varied with sandy beaches and dunes, wetlands and rocky cliffs and bluffs. There’s always something new to see.

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Peter Rose is a geologist with Minerals Management for the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. He noted the state owns approximately six million acres of mineral rights. “We’re responsible for providing access to those areas for leasing and development and monitoring those activities,” he said.

Removing anything from a national park is illegal, but most Michigan State Parks allow rockhounding and beachcombing. “There is a state law that limits the collection of common variety rocks, stones, minerals and invertebrate fossils to 25 pounds per person per year,” said Rose.

Here are eight beach finds common to Michigan’s varied beaches.

1. Beach Glass

Beach glass comes from discarded glass fragments and is highly collectible.

Mother Nature’s hand smoothes it and often creates a frosted look. Although glass can be found on most beaches, glass found in freshwater is called beach glass whereas the term sea glass is applied to glass shaped by salt water.

“From my experience, beach glass from Lake Michigan has more frost, due to the large in size rocks and massive amounts of them that naturally tumble (the glass) around, making it frosty and smooth,” said Elisa Garfinkel, who makes color-changing mood stones from this variety of glass.

Beach glass is beautiful and can be decades old or more recent in vintage.

“A lot of people dispose of their trash on the beaches and a lot of it accumulates that way,” said Rose. This refuse includes bottles, jars, household items and even glass from shipwrecks. Colors will vary based on the types of glass that entered the water at any given place and time.

“Clear, green and brown are the most common colors. Reds, oranges and blues are more rare,” said Garfinkel. “Clear beach glass is VERY abundant, hence why I started painting it to really make those colors pop.”

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Leland Blue Stone Courtesy Cortney Brenner

2. Leland Blue Stone

Not a stone but actually a slag, Leland blue stone is a byproduct of stony waste matter separated from metals during the smelting or refining of ore. Rose said slag is found throughout Michigan where iron smelters were in use in the past, especially in the northern part of the state. Its namesake Leland is an unincorporated town about 25 miles northwest of Traverse City. But, Rose points out, Leland Blue Stone can be found farther south through transportation via lake currents.

“It comes in a variety of different colors including purple, gray and shades of green. It’s essentially glass mixed with chemicals and other materials,” he said. “To some people, it looks like obsidian. People can be fooled into thinking it’s a naturally occurring volcanic glass, but it’s manmade.

It’s also a rare stone because the heyday of the ironworks industry was in the late 1800s. In addition, most blue slag was disposed of in deep bodies of water away from the general population.

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Petoskeystone polished. Courtesy A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum, Michigan Technological University

3. Petoskey Stone

Both a rock and a fossil, Petoskey stone is Michigan’s state stone. Made from fossilized rugose coral, it is found only in the Alpena limestone strata which is part of the Traverse Group of the Devonian age. The stone is made up of tightly packed, six-sided corallites — the skeletons of the once-living coral polyps that resided in warm shallow waters that covered Michigan 350 million years ago.

The stone was named in honor of Ottawa chief Pet-O-Sega.

“It crops up very close to the surface in the northeast Michigan area of Alpena, as well as in Petoskey and Charlevoix, along that stretch of shore,” Rose noted. “You can find them across the Lower Peninsula. They can also be found in the interior of the state in gravel pits or places where glaciers have helped deposit them.”

Water waves can wear down the fossils and give them a polish. You can only see the pattern on an unpolished Petoskey stone when it is wet. When they’re dry, the rocks look more like a basic grey limestone.

The peak of Petoskey stone hunting is during the spring season once the winter ice sheets begin to disappear.

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Horncoral Courtesy A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum, Michigan Technological University

4. Horn Coral

Michigan possesses a variety of highly sought-after coral fossils. In the scientific world, horn corals are known as rugosa, but collectors renamed the coral to better reflect its appearance. These corals have a unique horn-shaped chamber with a wrinkled (rugose) wall. These extinct creatures were micro-carnivores because they feasted on tiny prey. The corals ranged in size from smaller than an inch to three feet in length.

Paleontologists use horn corals as index fossils to help determine the age of rock strata.

“They look like cornucopias. You can find them — pieces generally — quite easily,” Rose said. “For a good portion of the Paleozoic Era (541-252 million years ago), Michigan was covered by shallow seas. There are thick sequences of limestone. A lot of them are fossiliferous beneath the Lower Peninsula of Michigan and part of the Eastern Upper Peninsula.”

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Agate Courtesy A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum, Michigan Technological University

5. Lake Superior Agates

This popular variety of agate, a billion years in the making, has iron-rich bands of color that give it red, orange and yellow hues. These agates can be found weighing more than 20 pounds to as small as a pea.

Rose explained these agates formed when air bubbles were trapped in the lava flow in what is now Lake Superior. When the lava cooled, water made its way into the holes formed by the bubbles, layering in quartz, iron and other minerals in the process. You can identify these agates by their irregular sphere shape.

“People compare (the design) to geodes. You get concentric rings of mineralization,” Rose said. These circles can resemble the rings on the cross-section of a tree.

Agates are dense and smooth and will feel waxy to the touch when rubbed. They may also have a pitted appearance. A completely smooth natural surface is rare.

“You can find agates across an expanse of the Lake Superior shoreline even though they originated toward the west,” he noted. “The lakes play a significant role in erosion and transportation of the sediment.”

Popular locales for finding Lake Superior agates include Little Girl’s Point near Ironwood, Grand Marais, the beaches east and west of Copper Harbor and Misery Bay.

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Sodalite-Syenite UV light. Courtesy A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum, Michigan Technological University

6. Fluorescent Rocks

Commonly found on Lake Superior beaches, collectors often enjoy searching for fluorescent rocks, which glow under ultraviolet light. Rose said a popular variety is the Yooperlite, which was discovered in 2017 by Erik Rintamaki. The stone was carried southward from Canada by glaciers during the last ice age. The presence of sodalite gives it its mystical glow. Rose said the name Yooperlites came because people of this region are often called “Yoopers” which is a take on the “U.P.” initials for Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

“A lot of loose rocks in Michigan came from glacial drift from further north,” he noted. Syenite pebbles, containing fluorescent sodalite, came from Canada to Michigan by glaciers.

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Greenstone. Courtesy A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum, Michigan Technological University

7. Greenstones

Greenstones (Chlorastrolite) are classified as Michigan’s official state gemstone. A type of pumpellyite mineral, it formed in the cavities of basaltic lava from the cooling of gas. It is found in Michigan because of the Midcontinent Rift System, a split in the Earth’s crust that started 1.1 billion years ago. Once the stone is polished it becomes a sparkling green-blue shade sporting turtle shell markings.

Large pieces of greenstone are hard to find. It is generally found as small, rounded pebbles. Beachcombers will encounter it along the Keweenaw Peninsula and throughout the Isle Royale archipelago where it’s regarded as Isle Royale Greenstone.

Since Isle Royale is a national park, rocks there cannot be removed and should instead be admired.

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Puddingstone. Courtesy A. E. Seaman Mineral Museum, Michigan Technological University

8. Pudding Stones

Pudding stones are a sedimentary conglomerate. These conglomerates have formed into a metamorphic rock known as quartzite. Legend has it, the stone got its name because it resembles raisin or plum pudding — a popular dish with European settlers.

Its base rock is white quartzite, with pebbles of jasper and other dark-hued inclusions. With origins in Canada, the stone was created approximately 2.3 billion years ago and then transported to Michigan in the till of the Laurentide glacier which covered the state roughly 24,000 years ago.

According to Michigan State University, “Because pudding stones are so prevalent to Michigan, the state has developed a small industry of making novelties and knick-knacks out of the rock. Puddingstone jewelry, ornaments, garden decorations and even nightlights made from pudding stones are becoming more and more popular.”

Pudding stones can be found in the east end of the Upper Peninsula particularly on Drummond Island – the second largest freshwater island in the United States. In addition, they can be found between Mackinaw City and Cheboygan.

Tips For Beachcombers

• The best time to search for beach glass is right after a storm when new stones are washed on shore.

• Rocks and fossils are less likely to be found in sandy areas.

• Almost any place with exposed gravel and rocks offers the chance to find Lake Superior agates.

• Many people find it easier to identify agates when the rocks are wet.

• Greenstone can be found in the spoil piles from copper mining on the Keweenaw Peninsula.

• Check rules and regulations to ensure you are not illegally removing beach glass, rocks or fossils from a park.

This story about Lake Michigan beaches previously appeared in Rock & Gem magazine. Click here to subscribe. Story by Sara Jordan-Heintz.

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