South west
Victoria is predominately a farming area. Warrnambool is the regional
centre, is located on the coast and has a population of some 30,000
people.
Fossicking sites are limited in the region as most land is privately
owned and generally inaccessible to fossickers. Currently (2006) club
members fossick at three main locations in the vicinity of Warrnambool.
These locations are
- The Mount
Shadwell quarry (operated by the Moyne
shire)
which is located at Mortlake, which is some 45km inland (north) of
Warrnambool. The quarry produces road making materials (different
grades of scoria). In the quarry volcanic "bombs" can be found, some of
which contain gem peridot.
- Lake
Keilambete quarry (privately owned) which
produces
limestone for soil conditioning purposes and for road material. A
variety of fossils including sharks teeth can be found at this quarry.
- Tarrone
quarry (a commercially operated quarry
with
restricted access) which produces basalt aggregates, within which are
found zeolites including calcites and aragonites.
Mount Shadwell is mainly of interest to fossickers for the peridot
which can be found at the quarry.
Over many years, members of the Warrnambool Gem Club have been
collecting peridot from the Mount Shadwell quarry at Mortlake in S.W.
Victoria. The peridot is found in volcanic bombs which are spread
throughout the volcanic ash/scoria which forms the volcanic cone which
is Mt. Shadwell.
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A GEMMY
PERIDOT BOMB FROM MT SHADWELL,
SHOWING THE TYPE OF BOMB WHICH WILL
YIELD CUTTABLE PERIDOT FOR FACETING |
FOSSICKERS FROM THE
GEELONG GEM CLUB AT MOUNT SHADWELL QUARRY |
Over recent years club members have been
finding
increasing amounts of orange/golden/yellow peridot as well as
the
"normal" green peridot. Many variations in between these two extreme
colours have also been found. Typically the rich green peridot has been
found in the black scoria in the quarry whereas the "golden peridot"
has been located in the red scoria. However this is not always the
case, as single bombs can be found containing both yellow and green
peridot as well as many other colours in between these two extremes.
Peridot is the name generally given by
lapidary
enthusiasts to gem quality olivine. Olivine is a "magnesium iron
silicate" which follows
the formulae (Mg,Fe)2SiO4. This mineral is one of an isomorphous series
which varies from the magnesium silicate "forsterite" (Mg2SiO4) to the
iron silicate "faylite" (Fe2SiO4). this variation in the
amounts of iron and magnesium influences the different colours in the
peridot found at Mortlake. Several of our club
members
have good collections of
faceted peridot which show the variation in colours present in the
material that can be fossicked from Mt Shadwell. The following photos
show some faceted gems cut by Brian Alexander and Alan Wood,
Warrnambool Gem Club
members. These gems range up to 4.6ct in weight and provide a good
indication of the wide range of colours available. The larger gems
often contain small inclusions but still cut very attractive gemstones.
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| A 1.6 ct ORANGE
PERIDOT CUT FROM MT SHADWELL PERIDOT. |
A GOOD INDICATION
OF THE COLOUR RANGE OF THIS PERIDOT CAN BE SEEN IN THESE GEMS |
Fossicking for Peridot at Mt Shadwell
Mt Shadwell is well known locally for
its volcanic
bombs, which range in size from a few centimetres across to huge
specimens over a metre long; although the majority of bombs would
measure around 10 to 15cm in diameter. Most of the bombs have
spectacular olivine cores with a thin coating of scoria on the outside.
Unfortunately, the olivine core usually consists of small crystals the
size of grains of sugar. The bombs which we gem hunters seek are those
which contain peridot of a size suitable for faceting. You generally
have to break open many of the "sugary bombs" before you strike a
"gemmy" bomb with suitable material within it. If you are lucky you may
also find an occasional bomb yielding anorthoclase of a size suitable
for faceting a nice gem.
Mt Shadwell is the type of
place you can visit
and find "plenty" or "nothing" if you are looking for facetable
peridot. I have visited the quarry on several occasions when I found no
facetable material, while at the same time some of my companions were
finding nice bombs with gem material within. However, my last 7 visits
have yielded several bombs containing good gem material each time. Each
"good bomb" can yield several "cutters". So like many fossicking
locations, you have to be digging in the "right spot" at the "right
time"!
During the last 12 months our club has
hosted visits
by several clubs, both Victorian and interstate.
If you plan to visit Mt Shadwell quarry,
you should
first visit the Moyne Shire offices at 1 Jamieson Ave., in Mortlake to
sign a consent form. The staff at the shire offices are very helpful
and can put you in contact with Alan Wood, a Warrnambool Gem club
member who lives in Mortlake (except when he migrates north during
winter, on fossicking trips) and who is usually only to happy to help
visiting fossickers.
Link
to Mt Shadwell and Mortlake information
Alan has become the local "expert" on
the minerals
to be found at Mt Shadwell. He has an excellent collection of "gemmy
bombs" from the Mount and a good display of peridot gems which he has
faceted from such bombs. While locals take these "bombs" for granted,
there are very few places in the world where such volcanic bombs can be
found. Calcite "micromount" specimens can also be collected at Mt
Shadwell with little difficulty.
While you are at the quarry, a good
place to look
for the peridot is in the large stockpile of "volcanic bombs" that the
quarry operators (the Moyne shire) stockpile for fossickers to work
through. Many good pieces of peridot have been obtained from that
stockpile!
When visiting the quarry you should wear
a high
visibility vest and follow the directions of the quarry foreman. The
main equipment you need is a good geo pick/hammer and something to
carry your finds in. Good footwear and long trousers are also essential.
Notes:
1. Isomorphism: is the phenomenon where the atoms of one element (such
as Fe, iron) replace the atoms of another element (such as Mg,
magnesium) in the crystal lattice to produce a continuum of minerals
between the two extremes.
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Lake Keilambete near Terang is
a half hour
drive east of Warrnambool. Here fossickers can search for marine
fossils in Ian Fenton’s limestone quarry on the edge of the
lake.
Lake Keilambete is a maar volcano, approximately 50,000 years old,
located some 4km northwest of Terang. There are many such maar volcanos
in the western district. They result from explosions occurring when hot
magma rises into rocks which are not far from the surface and which
contain lots of ground water. High pressure steam is produced, which
blasts the magma and surrounding rocks into clouds of small fragments.
Lake Keilambete’s circular crater, which resulted from such
an
eruption/explosion, is quite beautiful. It is some 2.4km in diameter
and 40m deep, with the lake up to 9m deep. (Ref. 1) The
crater is
surrounded by a tuff ring with limestone below the tuff. It is this
limestone and tuff that is mined in the quarry and it is in the
limestone that the fossils can be found.
Ian Fenton has been operating
the quarry since
the late 1960’s for material to make farm tracks with the
limestone also being used for ‘soil conditioning’.
Over
that time Ian has collected a good set of fossils. Of particular note
is his very impressive collection of fossil sharks teeth, one of which
is shown below!

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| FOSSICKING
FOR FOSSILS AT LAKE KEILAMBETE |
FOSSIL SHARKS TEETH
FROM FENTONS QUARRY
|
During field trips a number of
impressive
fossils have been collected. At the quarry a variety of 40 -
50
million year old fossils can be found, ranging from whale vertebrate
and the sharks teeth to many different types of shells. Fossickers
wishing to visit the quarry should contact Ian Fenton prior to visiting
the area (Ph. 03 55921391).
‘Tarrone’
quarry is located a half
hours drive north-west of Warrnambool. This quarry, which is not open
to the general public, is a working quarry and is inaccessible during
the week when excavation and blasting work is undertaken. It is
necessary to obtain special permission if you wish to fossick there,
and members of the Warrnambool are only able to obtain access the
quarry because a club member works at the site. The field
trips to Tarrone enable the collection of zeolite specimens;
club
members having found a number of beautiful aragonite and calcite
specimens in recent visits. The fossicking involves the use of hammers
and rock chisels in the breaking open of basalt boulders in
the
search for minerals/crystals. Typical finds include calcite crystals
plus aragonite and augite specimens, some of which are shown in
the photos below.
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| Tarrone
quarry |
Tarrone
quarry |
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| Aragonite
from Tarrone quarry |
Calcite
from Tarrone quarry |
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| Another
calcite specimen from Tarrone quarry |
References:
1. Volcanoes in Victoria, Royal Society
of Victoria, W.Birch, 2000
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