List of U S state minerals, rocks, stones and gemstones

Source From Wikipedia English.

Leaders of states in the U.S. which have significant mineral deposits often create a state mineral, rock, stone or gemstone to promote interest in their natural resources, history, tourism, etc. Not every state has an official state mineral, rock, stone and/or gemstone, however.

In the chart below, a year which is listed within parentheses represents the year during which that mineral, rock, stone or gemstone was officially adopted as a state symbol or emblem.

Table of minerals, rocks, stones and gemstones

State, federal district, territory Mineral Rock or stone Gemstone
Alabama
 
Hematite (1967)
 
Marble (1969)
 
Star blue quartz (1990)
Alaska
 
Gold (1968)
 
 
Nephrite jade (1968)
Arizona
 
Wulfenite (2017)
 
Turquoise (1974)
Arkansas
 
Quartz (1967)
 
Bauxite (1967)
 
Diamond (1967)
California[A]
 
Gold (1965); California's nickname is the Golden State
 
Serpentinite (1965)
 
Benitoite (1985)
Colorado[B]
 
Rhodochrosite (2002)
 
Yule marble (2004)
 
Aquamarine (1971)
Connecticut
 
Almandine garnet (1977)
 
Delaware
 
Sillimanite (1977)
Florida[C]
 
Agatized Coral (1979)
 
Moonstone (1970)
Georgia
 
Staurolite (1976)
 
Quartz (1976)
Hawaiʻi
 
Black coral (1987)
Idaho
 
Star garnet (1967)
Illinois
 
Fluorite (1965)
 
Dolostone (2022)
Indiana
 
Salem limestone (1971)
Iowa
 
Geode (1967)
Kansas
 
Galena (2018)
 
Greenhorn Limestone, from which the Kansas Stone Posts were cut. (2018)
 
Jelenite, a form of amber (2018)
Kentucky
 
Coal (1998)
 
Kentucky agate (2000)
 
Freshwater pearl (1986)
Louisiana
 
Agate (2011)
 
Lapearlite (Eastern oyster shell) (2011)
Maine Granitic pegmatite (2023)
 
Tourmaline (1971)
Maryland
 
Patuxent River stone agate (2004)
Massachusetts[D]
 
Babingtonite (1971)
 
Roxbury puddingstone (1983)
 
Rhodonite (1979)
Michigan
 
Petoskey stone fossilized coral (1965)
 
Chlorastrolite (aka Isle Royale greenstone) (1972)
Minnesota
 
Lake Superior agate (1969)
Mississippi
 
Petrified wood (1976)
Opal (2023)
Missouri
 
Galena (1967); Missouri's nickname is the Lead State
 
Mozarkite (1967)
Montana
 
Sapphire (1969)
and
 
Montana Agate (1969)
Nebraska
 
Prairie agate (1967)
 
Blue chalcedony (1967)
Nevada
 
Metal: Silver (1977); Nevada's nickname is the Silver State
 
Sandstone (1987)
 
Precious Gemstone: Virgin Valley black fire opal (1987)

 
Semiprecious Gemstone: Nevada turquoise (1987)
New Hampshire
 
Beryl (1985)
 
Granite (1985); New Hampshire's nickname is the Granite State
 
Smoky quartz (1985)
New Jersey Franklinite
New Mexico
 
Turquoise (1967)
New York
 
Garnet (1969)
North Carolina
 
Gold (2011)
 
Granite (1979)
 
Emerald (1973)
North Dakota
Ohio
 
Ohio flint (1965)
Oklahoma
 
Crystal: Hourglass selenite (2005)
 
Barite Rose (1968)
 
Oregon[E] State Twin Minerals:
 
Oregonite (2013)
and
 
Josephinite (2013)
 
Thunderegg (1965)
 
Oregon sunstone labradorite (1987)
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
 
Bowenite serpentine (1966)
 
Cumberlandite (1966)
South Carolina
 
Blue granite (1969)
 
Amethyst (1969)
South Dakota
 
Rose quartz (1966)
 
Fairburn agate (1966)
and
State Jewelry: Black Hills Gold
Tennessee
 
Agate (2009)
 
Limestone (from 1979 to present)
and formerly
 
Tennessee agate (from 1969 until 2009)
 
Tennessee River Pearl (1979)
Texas
 
Precious Metal: Silver (2007)
 
Oligocene petrified palmwood (1969)
 
Gemstone: Texas blue topaz (1969)

 
Gem Cut: "Lone Star Cut" (1977)
Utah
 
Copper (1994)
 
Coal (1991)
 
Topaz (1969)
Vermont
 
Talc (1991)
 
Granite (1992)
and
 
Marble (1992)
and
 
Slate (1992)
 
Grossular garnet (1991)
Virginia
 
Nelsonite (2016)
Washington
 
Petrified wood (1975)
West Virginia[F]
 
Bituminous coal (2009)
 
Mississippian Lithostrotionella fossil coral (1990)
Wisconsin
 
Galena (1971)
 
Red granite (1971)
Wyoming
 
Wyoming nephrite jade (1967)

See also

Endnotes

  1. ^ In 1965, California became the first state to name an official state rock. A 2010 effort led by State Senator Gloria J. Romero, a Democrat from Los Angeles, sought to remove serpentine from its perch as the state's official stone. Organizations such as the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization have supported the move as the olive green rock is a source of chrysotile, a form of asbestos that can cause mesothelioma and other forms of cancer. Geologists have rallied to oppose the bill, arguing that there is no way to be harmed from casual exposure to serpentine. The bill did not reach a final vote and died in committee at the end of August 2010. In 1986, California named benitoite as its state gemstone, a form of the mineral barium titanium silicate that is unique to the Golden State and only found in gem quality in San Benito County.
  2. ^ Colorado is the only state whose geological symbols reflect the national flag's colors: red (rhodochrosite), white (yule marble), and blue (aquamarine).
  3. ^ Florida's state gem, moonstone, was adopted to highlight Florida's role in the United States' Lunar program, which landed the first astronauts on the Moon.
  4. ^ Since 1983, Massachusetts has had 3 other official state rocks: State Historical Rock (Plymouth Rock), State Explorer Rock (Dighton Rock), and State Building and Monument Stone (Granite). In 2008, a State Glacial Rock (Rolling Rock) was designated as well.
  5. ^ A measure passed the Oregon Senate in March 1965 naming the thunderegg as Oregon's state rock, in a move that was supported as a way to stimulate tourism in the state. The thunderegg, a nodule-like geological structure, similar to a geode, that is formed within a rhyolitic lava flow, were said by the Native Americans of Warm Springs to have been created by thunder spirits that lived in the craters of Mount Hood and Mount Jefferson.
  6. ^ In 2009, West Virginia named bituminous coal as its official state rock, in a resolution that noted that the coal industry plays an "integral part of the economic and social fabric of the state". West Virginia joined Kentucky and Utah, which also recognize coal as a state mineral or rock. The drive to name coal as an official state symbol was initiated by a high school student from Wharncliffe, West Virginia, who initiated her project at a school fair and collected 2,500 signatures on a petition that was submitted to legislators.

References

External links