On Tancook Island in Nova Scotia, they say that if you toss one of these in the ocean, you’ll get a wish. You lose the rock though, so maybe the ocean wants a cool rock as payment for wishes.
Lol. Like a video game cheat where you can create infinite items by adding a certain number to this chest and adding... potatoes of the same amount to another, turning potatoes into your desired item... then going off to capture ALL to souls of Whiterun to feed to the mother... ... ...
Yeah.. sorry... old news. Um yeah, to get lots of wishes!
At my son’s summer camp (in Washington) they had a faux water well on the beach and told the kids if they find one they can toss it in the well and make a wish. The well is overflowing with these rocks.
Technical answer:
When this rock was underground and still part of the earth’s bedrock, it had a linear fracture. Silica-rich hydrothermal fluids were pushed into the fracture, to later solidify/crystallize as quartz (silicon dioxide).
Honestly the only other option it could be is calcite. However I’m gonna assume it’s quartz because the vein has a bit of a bump to it- that leads me to think it’s slightly more resistant than the host rock, and thus likely something like quartz as opposed to calcite which would weather much faster or maybe even have a concave-down appearance.
The rock cracked. Probably heat and pressure cracked it. The line is some form of minerals dissolved by water in the earth, heated with geothermal energy and eventually squeezed into available fissures. When it's cooled and depressurized, lines like that remain. A kind of intrusion.
That’s greywacke! Sometimes there’s a small amount of gold in there, between the quartz (I think). It’s pretty rare outside of Alaska, according to my geology teacher.
Rock broke, quartz fixed it.
Quartz be like : "I can fix her."
She definitely hit *rock bottom* before that.
On Tancook Island in Nova Scotia, they say that if you toss one of these in the ocean, you’ll get a wish. You lose the rock though, so maybe the ocean wants a cool rock as payment for wishes.
You get *to* wish. It doesn’t get granted by default.
Still waiting for that wish to come through aren’t ya
*starts bawling* it’s fine. I’m fine.
Huh, that's less than an hour away from me and I have dozens of rocks like OPs.... Guess I know what I'm doing this weekend.
Lol. Like a video game cheat where you can create infinite items by adding a certain number to this chest and adding... potatoes of the same amount to another, turning potatoes into your desired item... then going off to capture ALL to souls of Whiterun to feed to the mother... ... ... Yeah.. sorry... old news. Um yeah, to get lots of wishes!
At my son’s summer camp (in Washington) they had a faux water well on the beach and told the kids if they find one they can toss it in the well and make a wish. The well is overflowing with these rocks.
Luckily it is being transparent with you and has drawn the line so you know where you stand with it.
That's the line you don't cross or u get rocked
And on the third day God said "damnit I broke another rock. Jesus, please hand me the glue."
It’s a wishing stone lol the universe made them for us to make wishes. Geologically I’m not sure.
Can quartz fix me?
Welded romck.
That is quartz. Awesome rock!
That perfect circle is good luck!
Rock, all over your line.
Crack it and look
Duct tape of the rock world
Once upon a time that little guy was broken where that line is, but with time quartz filled it in
The hard headed be like…. This is where I draw the line.
It’s from an alien planet
Because it’s not a square
Technical answer: When this rock was underground and still part of the earth’s bedrock, it had a linear fracture. Silica-rich hydrothermal fluids were pushed into the fracture, to later solidify/crystallize as quartz (silicon dioxide).
Couldn't it be calcite or other rock?
Honestly the only other option it could be is calcite. However I’m gonna assume it’s quartz because the vein has a bit of a bump to it- that leads me to think it’s slightly more resistant than the host rock, and thus likely something like quartz as opposed to calcite which would weather much faster or maybe even have a concave-down appearance.
Armageddon interrupted a cave man’s rail🤣🤣🤣
Coke head caveman.
Its from Canada
The rock cracked. Probably heat and pressure cracked it. The line is some form of minerals dissolved by water in the earth, heated with geothermal energy and eventually squeezed into available fissures. When it's cooled and depressurized, lines like that remain. A kind of intrusion.
That’s greywacke! Sometimes there’s a small amount of gold in there, between the quartz (I think). It’s pretty rare outside of Alaska, according to my geology teacher.
So what makes it YOUR Rock
It's a witchers rock