Showing posts with label Michigan petsokey stones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michigan petsokey stones. Show all posts

Friday, October 5, 2012

Michigan Petoskey Stones For Sale-Information-Location-Pandora Charms-Pandora Beads


Are you looking for a Pandora Charm that is like no other? 

Then the Michigan Petoskey stone is for you! Its rare earth tone quality's and Rich History for Michigan Makes the Petoskey stone Rare and only found in one place and that is right here in the Great state of Petoskey Michigan,

All our beads our hand made to fit Pandora Bracelets-Pandora Charms-Pandora Jewelry.

CLICK HERE TO BUY MICHIGAN PETOSKEY BEADS!!! ALL HAND MADE RIGHT IN PETOSKEY MICHIGAN. The Beads that is not the stones ;)


Petoskey stone


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Unpolished Petoskey stone with cmscale.
Petoskey stone is a rock and a fossil, often pebble-shaped, that is composed of afossilized coralHexagonaria percarinata.[1] The stones were formed as a result of glaciation, in which sheets of ice plucked stones from the bedrock, grinding off their rough edges and depositing them in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, and the northwestern (and some in the northeastern) portion of Michigan's lower peninsula. In some areas of Michigan, complete fossilized coral colony heads can be found.
Petoskey stones are found in the Gravel Point Formation of the Traverse Group. They are fragments of a coral reef that was originally deposited during the Devonian period. [1] When dry, the stone resembles ordinary limestone but when wet or polished using lapidarytechniques, the distinctive mottled pattern of the six-sided coral fossils emerges. It is sometimes made into decorative objects. Other forms of fossilized coral are also found in the same location.
In 1965, it was named the state stone of Michigan.

Locations

Petoskey stones can be found on various beaches and inland locations in Michigan with many of the most popular being those surrounding Petoskey and Charlevoix. The movement of the frozen lake ice acting on the shore during the winters is thought to turn over stones at the shore of Lake Michigan exposing new Petoskey stones at the water's edge each spring.[3]
Similar fossil corals occur in a variety of locations, however the name Petoskey stone should only be applied to those from Michigan.