The Flickr Pennsylvanian Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

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Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 96 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 96

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 99 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 99

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 103 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 103

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 100 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 100

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 101 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 101

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 102 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 102

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 98 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 98

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 97 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 97

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 95 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 95

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 91 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 91

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 92 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 92

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 90 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 90

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 94 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 94

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 84 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 84

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 86 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 86

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 85 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 85

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 89 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 89

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 88 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 88

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 87 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 87

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 80 by James St. John

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Nellie Blue Flint (Upper Mercer Flint, Middle Pennsylvanian; eastern Ohio, USA) 80

Tumble-polished "Nellie Blue Flint" from the Pennsylvanian of Ohio, USA.

"Flint" is the official gemstone of Ohio. Flint is actually chert (the two terms are synonymous, despite what anyone else might say), a cryptocrystalline, quartzose sedimentary rock. High-quality, colorful, multicolored, and multipatterned flint is moderately common at some Ohio localities. A couple famous flint occurrences in east-central Ohio include the Vanport Flint at Flint Ridge and Nellie Blue Flint in Coshocton County.

Nellie Blue Flint is essentially restricted to the Nellie area of northwestern Coshocton County. It consists of attractive, frequently complexly-patterned, dark bluish to bluish-black chert. Fractures and cavities (vugs) are often present and have been filled or nearly filled with pale bluish-gray chalcedony and/or megaquartz (= visible hexagonal quartz crystals). Body fossils and trace fossils can be present.

Nellie Blue is a local color variant of the Upper Mercer Flint, which is usually a black flint with whitish speck (= often body fossils and fossil fragments). The Upper Mercer Flint is a somewhat persistent horizon of chertified marine fossiliferous limestone in east-central and eastern Ohio called the Upper Mercer Limestone.

Stratigraphy: Upper Mercer Flint (= chertified Upper Mercer Limestone), upper Bedford Cyclothem, upper Pottsville Group, Atokan Series, lower Middle Pennsylvanian

Locality: unrecorded site in eastern Ohio, USA (likely at or near the town of Nellie, northwestern Coshocton County)