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The Water Cooler
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OSA Chit Chat Thread
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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 3946717" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>Went to the mountains around Superior AZ today with friends to mine Apache Tears. We found around 40. </p><p>Real history is that US Calvary was chasing a war party of Apaches in the Superstition Mountains, finally cornering them on a cliff. </p><p>Instead of submitting to capture, they chose to ride their horses off the cliff to their death. </p><p>The legend is the Apache Tears were the tears of the wives and children of the worriers left on the ground. </p><p>In reality they are volcanic glass that were formed during a volcanic eruption. </p><p>Typically found in formations of perlite. They can be from bb size to golf ball size in what we have found. </p><p>Once polished, you can see through them with interesting patterns inside the “tears”.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 3946717, member: 5412"] Went to the mountains around Superior AZ today with friends to mine Apache Tears. We found around 40. Real history is that US Calvary was chasing a war party of Apaches in the Superstition Mountains, finally cornering them on a cliff. Instead of submitting to capture, they chose to ride their horses off the cliff to their death. The legend is the Apache Tears were the tears of the wives and children of the worriers left on the ground. In reality they are volcanic glass that were formed during a volcanic eruption. Typically found in formations of perlite. They can be from bb size to golf ball size in what we have found. Once polished, you can see through them with interesting patterns inside the “tears”. [/QUOTE]
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