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Easy Pickins' at Australia's Agate Creek

Rock&Gem Magazine

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September 2021

As a member of a few Australian Facebook fossicking (rockhounding) groups, I had been seeing photos of an amazing variety of cut and polished agates posted by people who had found them at Agate Creek.

- JENNI CLARK AND LEIGH TWINE

Easy Pickins' at Australia's Agate Creek

I had never been much interested in agates, but these photos really opened my eyes to the diversity and beauty of these round rocks. Now geography is not my strong suit – I leave that to Leigh – but when I realized that Agate Creek is actually up in our neck of the woods (North Queensland, Australia), arrangements were made to spend a few days there.

More than a century ago, prospectors explored the area around Gilberton for gold deposits, as the region had shown a lot of promise for commercial gold mining ventures. It was discovered that an abundance of amygdule-derived agates had accumulated in one of the creeks that flowed into the Robertson River. These agates were believed to have weathered and eroded from basalts of Carboniferous age, which were covered in sedimentary sandstone material when this region was an inland sea. The creek became known as Agate Creek and was first officially mentioned by W.E. Cameron in his GSQ report dated 1900. At that time, agate was thought to be beautiful but of little real value as mines in Germany and Brazil supplied the world market.

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