Rock of the Month Fire Agate - Arlington Gem and Mineral Club
Transcription
Rock of the Month Fire Agate - Arlington Gem and Mineral Club
1408 GIBBINS ROAD, ARLINGTON, TEXAS 76011Volume 69, Issue 04, April 2014 ROCKHOUND NEWS OF THE ARLINGTON GEM & MINERAL CLUB Rock of the Month http://www.fireagateartstudio.com/sales4.html Fire Agate April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 1 President’s Speaking CLUB PURPOSE: To encourage the study of earth sciences, lapidary arts and other related fields, and to enjoy good fellowship with those who share like interests. CONTACTS webmaster@agemclub.com World Wide Web Home Page http://www.agemclub.org Business meeting and program 1st Tuesday 7:30PM AGMC Board Meeting 7:00PM on Last Tuesday of the Month I am officially TIRED of winter, I have been tired since about November 16th, or maybe a few days earlier. It is still a chilly 34 F outside, but our daffodils are hanging tough, and that eternal optimist The Weatherman assures me it will reach 73 this afternoon and that is indeed spring-like. I'll take it. The new season brings with it some refreshing changes in our club website. After a pair of meetings in March, our most visible guru’s gathered with other interested club members and improvements began to come about! Jeremy Dubhroz, Torre Quinn, and Tom McCormick III created and shared passwords and other electronic hocus pocus, and suddenly, longstanding problems were resolved. Features became current! Dates for the show appeared for 2013! But that’s not all. The creative among us showered them with new ideas to make the site easier to navigate, more attractive looking, and more efficient to communicate with our target audiences! Many of the suggestions came from Emie Stewart, as well as from John Alexander and Kris Kistner. The group is so effective I have asked them to continue to meet on a regular basis to see that we follow through on the planned improvements to the site. They selected April th 15 for our next meeting. It will be held at 7:00 PM at the clubhouse. Other people whose input will be helpful will be sought, and others who would like to join the effort may please contact me. The improvements don’t all appear at once, because rebirth takes time—but they are on the way, just in time to become a lot more useful in promoting our upcoming Jewelry Gem and Mineral Show! ARLINGTON GEM AND MINERAL CLUB MEMBER OF SOUTH CENTRAL FEDERATION OF MINERAL SOCIETIES AMERICAN FEDERATION OF MINERALOGICAL SOCIETIES April 2014 The show for this year is shaping up, thanks in no small part to our new Show Chair, Kris Kistner, and we have now contracted with the Grapevine Convention Center to hold our 2015 show there as well—second weekend in June. This will build a sense of continuity with our show visitors, and will help building participation. This will, in turn, help build membership in the club. It’s all good. One final note regarding the show. There are only a few slots left for dealers. We have in hand contracts for dealers whose payments will cover the costs for renting the facilities. That’s a milestone for development of a cost-effective outreach effort. Now let’s move ahead with planning for our displays, which show off our talents and the effectiveness of our classes. The classes are what bring new members to the club, and a sense of revitalization to all of us. What are you going to display this year? Now it’s back to the reality of what the coming of Spring really means: For me, that’s back to the drawing board—for INCOME TAXES! I hope we’ll get ours done before our next club meeting—April 1, 2014! Your President—Carl Wells THE HOUNDS TALE 2 I N S I DE T H I S ISSUE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE COMMITTEE MEETING: 7:00 PM LAST TUESDAY OF THE MONTH COMMITTEE MEMBERS SERVE AS UNPAID VOLUNTEERS. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN VOLUNTEERING TO FILL A VACANT POSITION PLEASE CONTACT THE PRESIDENT. ELECTED OFFICERS (Voting) President Secretary Treasurer - Finance 1st Vice Pres (Operational/Educational Classes) 2nd Vice Pres (Programs) 3rd Vice Pres (Field Trips) 4th Vice Pres (Youth Programs) Delegate at Large (Ombudsperson) 4 How to Cut Fire Agate APPONTED POSITIONS (Voting) 5 Rare Diamond 7 April Fools Day Recipe 8 Bench Tips Past President (Donations Chairperson) Bulletin (The Hound’s Tale) Editor Show Chairperson Lapidary Department Chairperson Membership Chairperson 9 May InterGem Show 9 Annual AGMC Show 10 April Class Report 11 April Class Schedule 12 May Tentative Class Schedule Carl Wells Marlenia Cohen Stephen Bennett Emie Stewart Jesse Baum Billy Harris Janet Gray Ray Wilkes Sue Dale Miller Gerald Pennington Kris Kistner Val Babineaux John Crabb APPONTED POSITIONS (Non-Voting) 13 Lapidary Calendar 14 Programs 14 Lapidary Shop Talk 15 Area Gem & Mineral Shows 16 March Minutes Library Chairperson Building Chairperson Hospitality Chairperson Welcome Chairperson Jacqueline Chirunga Mike Armstrong Leslie Wilkes Sandra Brazzale AGMC needs leadership volunteers for constitution and parliamentary procedure; jewelry making; long-range planning, and club history. People interested in serving the club in these areas, please discuss it with President Carl. OPERATIONS VOLUNTEERS (Non-Voting) Webmaster Sunshine Newsletter Mailing Grounds Computer/Electronics Technology International Gem and Jewelry AKS Shows Jeremy Dubhros Marge Harrand Lois McCormick Barbara Poplin Torre Quinn Joyce Speed Kris Galbraith THE HOUND’S TALE Published monthly by the Arlington Gem and Mineral Club. ADS AND ARTICLES Lapidary related ads and articles from members of AGMC are welcomed. They will be placed on a space available basis, first in first out. Include your name and contact information. Send ads and articles to the editor at our web site: http://www.agemclub.org, click on “CONTACTS” (upper right), then, on the next page click on “Hound’s Tale Editor” (bottom center). Alternatively, you can send them to GeraldinDallas@gmail.com. Deadline date for ads and articles is the 15th of the month. April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE Arlington Gem and Mineral Club 1408 Gibbons Road Arlington, Texas 76011 3 How To Cut And Polish Fire Agate Nova Wells, cc Fire agate has the same properties common to all agates, plus some special conditions. It is a chalcedony and is formed in botryoidal layers, which means ‘like a bunch of grapes.’ The ‘fire’ comes from very thin layers of iron oxide that coat occasional layers of clear chalcedony, with other clear and brown layers in between. Fire agate is predominately brown in color but often has masses of white attached. Good fire agate will have more than one layer of ‘fire,’ or iron oxide which produces iridescence in the same way a skim of oil produces color on water. There are places in both New Mexico and Arizona where the stone may be collected and it is also mined in Mexico. Begin by using the saw to remove any amount of plain white stone that is attached. Be careful to check each saw cut to be sure you didn’t cut into some color (fire). If there is no layer of fire visible begin to grind carefully over the surface of the stone until you can spot one or more layers of iridescence. Fire agate sold by dealers will often have a ‘window’ cut to show where the color is. Because it is botryoidal most fire agate must be worked by hand because it involves concave as well as convex surfaces. There are two types of tools you can use with equal success to work fire agate. You can use a Dremel or Flex Shaft with a series of diamond tools or you can use short pieces of wood dowel in several sizes that you shape yourself. The dowel can be put in an electric drill and used with commercial diamond powder in grades from grind to polish. The trick is to locate the layer of iridescence covering as much surface as possible and then remove all but the thinnest layer of clear chalcedony that covers it. I begin with small round or pointed diamond bits in the Dremel to remove unwanted stone. USE LOTS OF WATER WHEN GRINDING. Because you are working close to your eyes (and nose) and producing powdered stone, it would be very easy to inhale the dust causing permanent damage to your lungs if you allow any dryness to occur. Never mind the possibility of cracking the stone. Stones are replaceable—your lungs aren’t. The next series of steps is to use diamond-imbedded Dremel tools graded from 180 grit to 15,000 grit. There are two types of tools you can use with equal success to work fire agate. Mine are ‘Nova Points’ but there are probably other brands that are just as good. Getting the stone smooth and showing the iridescence in a finished state may take several hours. Final polish can be done with a felt wheel and tin oxide. The rewards are worth the patience required. April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 4 Rare Diamond Reveals Earth's Interior is All Wet By Becky Oskin, Senior Writer March 12, 2014 2:14 PM A diamond from Juína, Brazil, containing a water-rich inclusion of the olivine mineral ringwoodite. Credit: Richard Siemens/University of Alberta A battered diamond that survived a trip from "hell" confirms a long-held theory: Earth's mantle holds an ocean's worth of water. "It's actually the confirmation that there is a very, very large amount of water that's trapped in a really distinct layer in the deep Earth," said Graham Pearson, lead study author and a geochemist at the University of Alberta in Canada. The findings were published today (March 12) in the journal Nature. The worthless-looking diamond encloses a tiny piece of an olivine mineral called ringwoodite, and it's the first time the mineral has been found on Earth's surface in anything other than meteorites or laboratories. Ringwoodite only forms under extreme pressure, such as the crushing load about 320 miles (515 kilometers) deep in the mantle. What's in the mantle? Most of Earth's volume is mantle, the hot rock layer between the crust and the core. Too deep to drill, the mantle's composition is a mystery leavened by two clues: meteorites, and hunks of rock heaved up by volcanoes. First, scientists think the composition of the Earth's mantle is similar to that of meteorites called chondrites, which are chiefly made of olivine. Second, lava belched by volcanoes sometimes taps the mantle, bringing up chunks of odd minerals that hint at the intense heat and pressure olivine endures in the bowels of the Earth. In recent decades, researchers have also recreated mantle settings in laboratories, zapping olivine with lasers, shooting minerals with massive guns and squeezing rocks between diamond anvils to mimic the Earth's interior. These laboratory studies suggest that olivine morphs into a variety of forms corresponding to the depth at which it is found. The new forms of crystal accommodate the increasing pressures. Changes in the speed of earthquake waves also support this model. Seismic waves suddenly speed up or slow down at certain depths in the mantle. Researcher think these speed zones arise from olivine's changing configurations. For example, 323 to 410 miles (520 to 660 km) deep, between two sharp speed breaks, olivine is thought to become ringwoodite. But until now, no one had direct evidence that olivine was actually ringwoodite at this depth. "Most people (including April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 5 me) never expected to see such a sample. Samples from the transition zone and lower mantle are exceedingly rare and are only found in a few, unusual diamonds," Hans Keppler, a geochemist at the University of Bayreuth in Germany, wrote in a commentary also published in Nature today. Earth's deepest ocean The diamond from Brazil confirms that the models are correct: Olivine is ringwoodite at this depth, a layer called the mantle transition zone. And it resolves a long-running debate about water in the mantle transition zone. The ringwoodite is 1.5 percent water, present not as a liquid but as hydroxide ions (oxygen and hydrogen atoms bound together). The results suggest there could be a vast store of water in the mantle transition zone, which stretches from 254 to 410 miles (410 to 660 km) deep. "It translates into a very, very large mass of water, approaching the sort of mass of water that's present in all the world's ocean," Pearson told Live Science's Our Amazing Planet. Plate tectonics recycles Earth's crust by pushing and pulling slabs of oceanic crust into subduction zones, where it sinks into the mantle. This crust, soaked by the ocean, ferries water into the mantle. Many of these slabs end up stuck in the mantle transition zone. "We think that a significant portion of the water in the mantle transition zone is from the emplacement of these slabs," Pearson said. "The transition zone seems to be a graveyard of subducted slabs." Keppler noted that it's possible the volcanic eruption that brought the deep diamond to Earth's surface may have sampled an unusually water-rich part of the mantle, and that not all of the transition-zone layer may be as wet as indicated by the ringwoodite. "If the source of the magma is an unusual mantle reservoir, there is the possibility that, at other places in the transition zone, ringwoodite contains less water than the sample found by Pearson and colleagues," Keppler wrote. "However, in light of this sample, models with anhydrous, or water-poor, transition zones seem rather unlikely." Ride on a rocket A violent volcanic eruption called a kimberlite quickly carried this particular diamond from deep in the mantle. "The eruption of a kimberlite is analogous to dropping a Mentos mint into a bottle of soda," Pearson said. "It's a very energetic, gas-charged reaction that blasts its way to Earth's surface." The tiny, green crystal, scarred from its 325-mile (525 km) trip to the surface, was bought from diamond miners in Juína, Brazil. The mine's ultradeep diamonds are misshapen and beaten up by their long journey. "They literally look like they've been to hell and back," Pearson said. The diamonds are usually discarded because they carry no commercial value, he said, but for geoscientists, the gems provide a rare peek into Earth's innards. The ringwoodite discovery was accidental, as Pearson and his co-authors were actually searching for a means of dating the diamonds. The researchers think careful sample preparation is the key to finding more ringwoodite, because heating ultradeep diamonds, as happens when scientists polish crystals for analysis, causes the olivine to change shape. "We think it's possible ringwoodite may have been found by other researchers before, but the way they prepared their samples caused it to change back to a lower-pressure form," Pearson said. Email Becky Oskin or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us @OAPlanet, Facebook and Google+. Original article at Live Science's Our Amazing Planet. April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 6 April Fools Day Recipe Okay, there is always some April fooling going around on April 1st. Start the day off with a wonderful breakfast of "ostrich eggs"! Some will refuse to eat them, but those who try it will realize ostrich eggs taste a lot like vanilla yogurt and peaches. This is easy to do. Add vanilla yogurt to a bowl and then add half of a peach, round side up. It looks like an egg doesn't it? http://www.serendipityfromjewels.com/ April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 7 Bench Tips by Brad Smith POLISHING WHEELS In the finishing sequence there's a step called pre-polishing, between sanding and buffing, and one of the most effective tools I've found to help here is the little silicone wheels used in a Foredom or Dremel. They come in several different abrasive levels and several different shapes. The wheels are color coded to denote their abrasive level. Different shapes (coin, knife, cylinder, point, etc) are available to match the geometry of the area being cleaned up. For a starter, I'd suggest a medium, a fine and an extra fine wheel in both the coin shape and the knife-edge shape. The thicker coin shapes are particularly handy. Be sure to get a few extra mandrels so you'll have one of each wheel shape mounted and ready to go. Cylinder shapes are nice for doing the inside of rings. Knife-edge shapes clean up the base of bezels quickly. Most jewelry catalogs carry these wheels, but often the color codes don't match between different manufacturers. _____ RESHAPING SILICONE WHEELS Silicone polishing wheels in the Dremel or Foredom are a great time saver, but after using them a bit they often need to be reshaped. This is particularly true with the knife-edge wheels. The natural thought is to grab one of your files and hold it up against the rotating wheel to reshape it. But this gives you a problem. The grinding grit in the silicone wheel is much harder than steel, meaning that you end up grinding down the teeth of your file. The best way to reshape your polishing wheels is to use a diamond file. If you don't have one and must use a steel file, I sacrifice the area of the file that is closest to the handle. That's an area which is not used in normal benchwork. "Get all 101 of Brad's bench tips in "Bench Tips for Jewelry Making" on Amazon " http://amazon.com/dp/0988285800/ April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 8 April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 9 April 2014 Class Report, by Emie Stewart Bezel-setting Fancy-cut Faceted Stones: Jurgen Maerz returns on April 26 and 27 to teach an advanced class in bezel-setting fancy-cut faceted stones such as marquis, pear, trillion, and emerald-cut. The class will cover the use of burs, creating a proper seat, removing excess materials, and the finer points of finishing. The class is full. Precious Metal Clay: On April 2, John Crabb will teach a one-day class on using precious metal clay. Signups were at the March meeting, and the class is full. Beginning Enameling: On Saturday, April 5, Barbara Maloney and Sue Poarch will teach a beginning enameling on copper class. Signups were at the March meeting. Chainmaille: Helen Vaught’s monthly chain maille class will not meet in April because of the Easter holiday. Her class will resume on the 3rd Sunday of May, from 2 – 4 PM in the library. Students will need to bring two pair of smooth-jawed pliers. Helen will provide kits for purchase for each class. Signups will be at the monthly meeting. Casting Lab: In May, Jack Spinks and Katiri Peters will be hosting the casting lab for those who have already had casting. Thursday, May 15, from 7 – 10 PM, is investing. Saturday, May 17, from 9 – noon, is the pour. Signups will be at the April meeting. Big Saw Class: On the second Monday of every odd numbered month, Val Babineaux will be teaching how to use the big saws. The class will be from 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. The next class will be in May, with signups at the April meeting. **Re Cabbing: The cabbing class is NOT a pre-requisite for other classes, including but not limited to, silversmithing. The cabbing class is a pre-requisite before members are allowed to use the lapidary equipment, which they may do only during open shop hours when a shop supervisor is present. Arlie Bucks: If you are using Arlie Bucks for a class or lapidary shop, please make sure you sign them on the front so that we know they have actually been used rather than being misplaced. Thank You: A HUGE thank you to the approximately 30 people who donated over 1500 hours of their time to teach classes and workshops at AGMC during January – October, 2013. While other clubs are dying on the vine, AGMC continues to experience robust growth, due primarily to active members just like you. If you are interested in teaching a class or workshop, please contact Emie Stewart at schueler@flash.net. Our instructors and supervisors are volunteers and do not get paid for their time. Thank you for the generous gift of your time and talent. AGMC Facebook Page: The club’s Facebook page has over 300 fans! Visit the page regularly to see what’s new, and “Like” it and “Share” it with your Facebook friends. This is free advertising for the club and its annual show. Class Postings: Please be considerate of your fellow club members during class signup times. A line usually forms just before 7:00 PM when the signup sheets for classes and workshops are posted. These sheets are posted at 7:00 PM on the hallway bulletin board at the clubhouse on the 1st Tuesday night of each month. They are usually posted a month before the class is scheduled to begin. Only current members in good standing, who have paid their membership fee, may sign up. Whenever possible, advance notice of upcoming signups is given in The Class Report and on the club’s Facebook page. The class schedule is emailed to club members approximately mid-month, and published in the club’s newsletter, available via email. When you sign up, please include your phone number and email in case the instructor needs to contact you. Also, please note the club’s no show policy, set forth below and on each signup sheet. No Shows: If you sign up for a class and are unable to attend, you must let the instructor know before the class date so that they can offer your slot to someone on the waiting list. Failure to do so may cause you to be listed as a “no show.” Club policy is that no-shows will be wait-listed for future classes at the instructor’s discretion. General Class Information: Class fees are $3/hr to cover building usage, plus any applicable supply fee as noted on the signup sheet. Students are expected to provide their own tools and materials except as noted on the signup sheet. The vast majority of instructors are volunteers who are not paid for their time but are willing to share their knowledge. Students are expected to follow instructor directions, cooperate in a classroom setting, and to observe all safety requirements. Failure to do so may be grounds for immediate removal from the class at the instructor’s discretion. Occasionally, outside professionals may be brought in to teach a class. These instructors are paid by the students, and the class fees are due at signup and are nonrefundable unless the Class Supervisor can fill the student’s seat before the class begins . April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 10 AGMC April 2014 Class Schedule SPECIAL WORKSHOPS: Precious Metal Clay Wednesday, April 2, 7 – 10 PM Instructor: John Crabb Beginning Enameling Saturday, April 5, 1 – 4 PM Instructors: Barbara Maloney and Sue Poarch Bezel Fabrication and Setting Fancy-cut Faceted Stones April 26 – 27, all day Instructor: Jurgen Maerz ONGOING CLASSES: Cab Class 1st Saturday, 1 – 4 PM Instructor: Ray Wilkes 2nd Tuesday, 7 – 10 PM Instructor: Stephen Bennett 4th Saturday, 1 – 4 PM Instructor: Barbara Maloney Faceting Wednesdays, 7 – 9 PM Instructor: Mike Knuth/Elaine O’Donley/Frank Krystinik/Donna Mallory/Dudley Barnes Beginning Glass Fusing Labs 2nd & 3rd Tuesdays, 7 – 10 PM Instructor: Karen Cessna Enameling Labs 2nd Saturdays, 1 – 5 PM Instructors: Sue Poarch and Barbara Maloney Chain Maille-cancelled for April due to Easter Silversmithing Beginning Silversmithing CLOSED Mondays, 7 – 10 PM Instructors: Jack Spinks/John Alexander Intermediate Silversmithing CLOSED Mondays, 7 – 10 PM in the cabbing room Instructor: Rotating; Class Assistant: Sue Bedell Advanced Silversmithing CLOSED Fridays, 7 – 10 PM Instructors: Emie Stewart/Marlenia Cohen/John Crabb Special Projects in Silversmithing for Alumni Thursdays, 1 – 4 PM Instructor: Emie Stewart April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 11 AGMC Tentative May 2014 Class Schedule SPECIAL WORKSHOPS: Big Saw Monday, May 12, 6 – 9 PM Instructor: Val Babineaux ONGOING CLASSES: Cab Class: 1st Saturday, 1 – 4 PM Instructor: Ray Wilkes 2nd Tuesday, 7 – 10 PM Instructor: Stephen Bennett 4th Saturday, 1 – 4 PM Instructor: Barbara Maloney Faceting Wednesdays, 7 – 9 PM Instructor: Mike Knuth/Elaine O’Donley/Frank Krystinik/Donna Mallory/Dudley Barnes Beginning Glass Fusing Lab 2nd & 3rd Tuesdays, 7 – 10 PM Instructor: Karen Cessna Enameling Labs 2nd Saturdays, 1 – 5 PM Instructors: Sue Poarch and Barbara Maloney Casting Lab Thursday, May 15, 7 – 10 PM (investing) Saturday, May 17, 9 – noon (pour) Instructors: Jack Spinks and Katiri Peters Instructors: Jack Spinks and Katiri Peters Chain Maille 3rd Sundays, 2 – 4 PM, in the Library Instructor: Helen Vaught Silversmithing Beginning Silversmithing CLOSED Mondays, 7 – 10 PM Instructors: Jack Spinks/John Alexander Intermediate Silversmithing CLOSED Mondays, 7 – 10 PM in the cabbing room Instructors: Rotating; Sue Bedell, class assistant Advanced Silversmithing CLOSED Fridays, 7 – 10 PM Instructor: Emie Stewart/Marlenia Cohen/John Crabb Special Projects in Silversmithing for Alumni Thursdays, 1 – 4 PM Instructor: Emie Stewart April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 12 Lapidary Lab Schedule April 2014 Consider a Shop Supervisor Role – talk to Val! Lapidary Calendar 4/5/2014 4/3/2014 4/12/2014 4/8/2014 4/10/2014 4/19/2014 4/15/2014 4/17/2014 4/26/2014 1st Sat 1st Thurs 2nd Sat 2nd Tues 2nd Thurs 3rd Sat 3rd Tues 3rd Thurs 4th Sat Val "Pops" Babineaux Ray Jeremy Val Stephen Barbara Richard Richard Don Val 9am-12pm 7pm-9pm 9am-12pm 9am-12pm 7pm-9pm 8am-12pm 7pm-9pm (FREE evening) 7pm-9pm 8am-12pm Local Area Club Meetings Dallas Gem & Mineral Society, 10205 Plano Rd, off of Plano Rd, Dallas, TX, meets the 3rd Tue. of each month at 7 pm Dallas Paleontological Society, EMGI (Bldg H, Brookhaven College, 3939 Valley View Lane, Farmers Branch, TX 75244), 2nd Wed each month at 7:30 pm Farmers Branch Senior Center, Rock & Mineral Club, 14055 Dennis Lane, Farmers Branch, TX 75234, meets the first Thursday of each month from 10am - noon. Fort Worth Gem & Mineral Club, 3545 Bryan Avenue, Ft Worth, TX, meets the 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:30 pm Lockheed-Martin Stone Steppers, 3400 Bryant-Irving Road, Fort Worth, meets the 2nd Tuesday at 7:30 pm (Note: These meetings may be relocated or delayed due to construction at club site) Oak Cliff Gem & Min Soc, South Hampton Community Hospital, 2929 S. Hampton Rd, Dallas, TX, 4th Tue. each month at 7 pm Pleasant Oaks Gem & Mineral Club, Garland Women's Bldg., 713 Austin, Garland, TX meets the 1st Thur. each month at 7:30 pm April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 13 PROGRAMS/OTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS: Programs – Jesse Baum April 1 – Val Babineaux – Safety Meeting May 6 - We will be preparing for the show, and there will be no program. Note from the Editor: Please continue to send in your interesting articles as it enriches club members and makes our newsletter more meaningful. Lapidary Shop Talk Barbara Maloney and Val Babineaux are rewriting the course for Beginning Cabochon which includes an all day course of making cabochons in the morning and operating the big saw in afternoon. We are also starting an Intermediate course with focus on competition cabbing. An advanced course will include cabochon material like opal, labradorite, etc., and free form cabochons. Saturday, May 3, 2014, is the Annual Rock Swap at AGMC, from 8am until... Instead of a potluck lunch, the Junior Students will host a concession stand with hot dogs, drinks, etc. Our parking lot swap meets will resume the third Saturday of each month in April. The swap meet will be moved indoors in case of inclement weather. April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 14 AREA GEM & MINERAL SHOWS March 28, 29, 2014, Ada, OK, Ada Gem Mineral & Fossil Club Show, Pontotoc County Fairgrounds,. April 12-13, 2014, Abilene, TX, Central Texas Gem & Mineral Society, Abilene Civic Center, N. 6th & Pine Street. April 12-13, 2014, Siloam Springs, AR, Northwest Arkansas Gem & Mineral Society Spring Show, Arkansas Community Building on Mount Olive. April 12-13, 2014, Waco, TX, Waco Gem & Mineral Club, Extraco Events Center, 4601 Bosque Blvd. April 18-20, 2014, Alpine, TX, Chihuahuan Desert Gem & Mineral Club, Alpine Civic Center, 801 W. Holland Ave., between 12th & 13th Streets. April 25-27, 2014, Houston, TX, Fine Minerals Show - Annual Show, Embassy Suites Hotel, 2911 Sage Road, Near the Galleria - Houston. April 26-27, 2014, Lubbock, TX, Lubbock Gem & Mineral Society, Lubbock Memorial Civic Center, 1501 Mac Davis Lane. May 16-18, 2014, AKS Jewelry & Bead Show, Grapevine Convention Center, 1209 S. Main Street, Grapevine, TX. May 24-25, 2014, Fort Worth, TX, Fort Worth Gem & Mineral Club, Will Rogers Memorial Center, Amon G. Carter Exhibit Building, 3401 W. Lancaster. May 31 - June 1, 2014, DeRidder, LA, DeRidder Gem & Mineral Society, Beauregard Parish, 610 West Street. June 7-8, 2014, Arlington, TX, Arlington Gem & Mineral Club, Grapevine Convention Center, 1209 S. Main Street. April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 15 ARLINGTON GEM AND MINERAL CLUB Date: March 4, 2014, General Meeting Minutes Call to Order: President Carl Wells called the meeting to order at 7:30 pm. Secretary’s report - Marlenia Cohen said minutes from last month were posted on the bulletin board and are included in the Hound’s Tale. Treasurer’s Report –Steve Bennett reported that we are solvent. Classes -- 1st VP Emie Stewart listed new classes: Several years ago, a scholarship fund was set up to encourage members to take classes and share what they learned. Members pay for their classes, but if the return home, develop a curriculum, and teach what they learned, they may be reimbursed via the scholarship. Tonight we wish to congratulate Sue Porch as one of our scholarship recipients. Sue and Barbara Malone have developed an enameling program. A new Beginning Enameling class, April 5 th, 1-4, is posted on the sign up board. We need to dispel a rumor. The Cabbing Class is not a prerequisite for any classes. You need to take the Cabbing Class if you wish to use any of the club lapidary equipment. Linda Trahan will be teaching Keum Boo March 22, and 29 th, two Saturdays in a row. Val Babineaux will be teaching Big Saw on March 10 th, 6 – 9 p.m. John Crabb will be teaching a Precious Metal Clay class on April 2 nd, 7 – 10 p.m. There is a $70 non-refundable materials fee. Casting Lab with Jack Spinks and Katiri Peters March 20 for investing, and March 22 for the pour. If you have had the casting class, and have something ready to cast. Can also do Delft Clay casting. There will not be a casting lab in April. The next casting lab will be May 15 for investment, and May 17 for the pour. Enameling lab second Saturday of every month with Barbara Maloney and Sue Porch. If you have had the enameling class, you are welcome. Jurgen Maertz advanced stone setting class is full. Helen Vaught will be teaching the DNA Chain the third Sunday of the month. Programs – 2nd VP Jesse Baum - Program on Microfossils given by Dr. Nestell. April will be our Safety Meeting. May we will be preparing for the show, and there will be no program. Field Trips – 3rd VP Billy Harris – Andy Weinzapfel spoke for Billy. March 29th, there is a trip to the Hill Country. We will meet in Marble Falls, with five or six stops to see. Andy Weinzapfel is helping to coordinate this trip. Carpooling in six or seven cars might be necessary. We will be looking at the Marble Falls Fault, where we can find limestone and granite. In the Llano River, we can see the Kingston Pluton, and collect xenoliths. After lunch, we will look at a Llanite dike. April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 16 April 18-20 a trip to the Walker Ranch is available. 20 people are needed to make the trip. Youth Programs – 4th VP Janet Gray We have changed our meeting time to Saturday, 1 – 3 p.m. We had four new members at the last youth meeting. We have contacted 75 Arlington schools, with no response. There is a signup sheet for the show, to get juniors active. Suggestions for recruiting younger members are welcome. At the show we will have a rock hunt. Donations for the juniors would be appreciated. Delegate at Large – Ray Wilkes – No complaints. Any comments, or suggestions for the club, please send them to Ray. Sunshine Report -- Marge Harrand: One card sent to Winifred Hill. Newsletter – The newsletter has a new editor, Gerald Pennington. Stephanie Makatura reported for him. The newsletter is ready to be proofed and will be online later this week. March 15th is the deadline for the next Hounds Tale. Show Report – We have a new dealer chairman, Carl Wells, with much help from Nova Wells. Nine dealers have reserved space in the show so far. We have room for 20 in the show. Reminders will be sent out to dealers. Kris asked for volunteers. Signup sheets are on the tables. Demonstrators are needed to show off what we do. There will be a rock hunt at the show. We have a contract for the 2015 show. It will be the second weekend of June 2015. Richard Makatura has been a big help on the mailers. Our cards have been designed, approved, and have just arrived. They are pending mail out at this time. Hospitality – Leslye Wilkes. Thanks for the great turnout of food tonight. Keep it coming – we are a rock club that likes to eat. Membership -- John Crabb - We now have 225 members. Four new members joined tonight. Donations –Dale Miller – Not present tonight. Lapidary -- Val Babineaux – One of our Genie’s needs repair. It was damaged at the last show. The Pixie is a better choice for shows, since it is smaller and easier to carry. Randy and Ingrid Lantz are back. If you take the Big Saw Class, and have something you want to cut, bring it. The Cabbing Class is not a prerequisite to take the Big Saw class . Building Manager -- Mike Armstrong helped to set up the meeting, but left before the meeting started. Librarian – Jacqueline Chirunga reminded everyone that we have an extensive collection of books and magazines. Books can be checked out for a month. Magazines must be read here. This month’s recommendation, A Field Guide to Fossils of Texas. April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 17 Old Business— None reported. New Business: Joyce Speed mentioned that the long range planning committee went through rocks from the donation committee. About one third of it was sorted into buckets and is for sale now, here in clubhouse. The rest of the material we have in the warehouse will be sorted later. Thanks to everyone who came and helped out. Fire extinguishers on the president’s desk are out of service. If anyone needs practice, use those…outside. Delbert Speed explained that the long range planning committee is made up of past presidents, and that Carl Wells is the head of the committee. This group was put together to carry out procedures that are outside of the realm of the executive committee. This group hopes to develop a three year plan, and a five year plan. Our president would like additional volunteers, other than just past presidents. AGMC constitution may need to be revisited. Anastasia Chaparro suggested that we keep a list of member expertise, so that we will know who can help in specific areas, or can give referrals. Barbara Malone thanked everyone who had sent well wishes. Break Fendol Chiles is making a cart for acetylene tanks. He had a sample to show. They will sell for $50. Drawings/Raffle: Name Badge/Sign In: o Richard Makatura won several pink cabs. o Sharon Young won a mica specimen. o Stephanie Makatura won a jasper slab. o Carl Wells won several issues of Rock and Gem magazine. Raffle: o Carl Wells won a Brazilian agate. o Ingrid Lantz won a piece of petrified wood. o Kenneth Brown won a carnelian pendant on a gold chain. o Kenneth Brown won a geode specimen. o Sandra Brazzale won a mica specimen. o Sue Porch won a hand carved ring. Program: Microfossils and the GSSP (Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point) Dr. Merlynd Nestell has been at UTA for 30 years. He, and his wife Galina, study General Invertebrate Paleontology and Micropaleontology. His primary focus is the Late Paleozoic foraminifers and conodonts. She prefers radiolarians. Together they work to define the boundaries of the Permian biostratigraphy. Much of their research has been done in the Crimea, Greece, North Caucasus of Russia, and in the Guadalupe Mountains and Apache Mountains of West Texas. The Meeting Adjourned at approximately 9:45 pm. Submitted by: Marlenia Cohen Secretary AGMC April 2014 THE HOUNDS TALE 18
Similar documents
Mineral of the Month Torbernite - Arlington Gem and Mineral Club
contact President Carrie Baum. OPERATIONS VOLUNTEERS (Non-Voting) Webmaster Sunshine Newsletter Mailing Grounds Computer/Electronics Technology Website Software Development International Gem and Je...
More information