 Part two, part two. Let's see if our stream is coming back. It is, it is. Very nice, very nice. I found my beach rocks, some of them. So we're gonna wait. Let me turn on my camera again while we wait for people to come back because we lost the stream. Let me turn this on and this on. Nice. Unfortunately, we lost the stream on the first part of this. We're gonna stick this together in one shot, right? But if we lost the stream, we're gonna wait about five minutes for people to roll in. We had like, I don't know, I forget what it was. 40 plus people watching it have got interrupted. We got interrupted. I did find my beach rocks though. I have a lot more beach rocks as well. Here's some of my beach rocks. But I, when I take beach rocks, because Fiona, well, we'll wait until nice. It will come, it comes back. We get confirmation until we get confirmation. And good morning, gang. Good morning, good morning. Our stream got killed, about 15 minutes in. Nice, everybody coming back. Confirmation, we're back. Shoot here, nice. Gaging gadgets, good morning, good morning. Shoot here, please. Night's a little comic right on. Fiona's back and ready. Okay, awesome. Now take a look at this. Here is, I'll turn off my camera as soon as we start looking at the other bigger rocks and stuff. Here is, oops, let me turn on my camera here. Look through the OBS, the timing. So here is some of my, just three of my beach rocks, right? But what I end up, hooray, welcome Fiona, welcome Fiona. Here's like three of my beach rocks that I have, right? I pick random ones, but I have a lot of other beach rocks that I've picked out through the years. And what I do with my beach rocks, I either use them as decorations on tables, like just put a whole bunch of rocks together in a bowl like this and just let them sit there and people come over, guess, and you play with the beach rocks and I grab them. And another thing I do with beach rocks is when I harvest them, when I grab them from the beach, I bring them home and I put them in my pots, my house plants. So I have a lot of rocks in my house plants. I don't know, for me, I think it's good because they have lots of minerals when you water and maybe a little bit of the minerals go for the rocks and stuff like this, but I just think it looks beautiful. Okay, Daya Thakchicho. Yopur Light is Senate rocks with large deposits of fluorescent soda, soda literally in the rocks. Really, it glows bright orange under UV and is found on the beaches of Lake Superior in the upper peninsula of Michigan and Wisconsin. You know what? I do have some rocks to have. Oh, here, let me show you, let me show you. Let me put this one aside. I got a feeling we're gonna have to do another live stream of these rocks later because there's no way we're gonna get through all of these. But let me show you these ones that you just mentioned because these rocks I picked up in that area and they're really small and these things, take a look. And this is glows under UV light, I believe, right? Senate rocks, the stream rocks and fluorescent, et cetera. Yeah, these are it, a pretty sure Daya Thakchicho. Take a look. This vein that you see here and it's rare, like these things are sought after in terms of rock hunters, right? Rock and mineral hunters. Okay, that's gore, yes, it was, I was so happy to find this, really, right? And then here's another one, take a look. I got the sun shining in my eyes, so it's hard to focus on this now. Take a look. I believe this is called Cetterite, like you said, and I picked it up in that area in Ontario near the Great Lakes. Just beautiful, I love these. They're little guys, but I love them, right? You add trim light to all your plants, cool. You haven't seen anything like this, yeah, super cool. And there's a green version of this mineral as well. I might have it. I used to have it, I think, right? I love this thing, super cool. Green in this wall called Mint Swirl and you can get it, and there's a green. Smith, that's what we call a chicho. Fiona wonders if the last sharp crystal one was found from magma or lava. It would have been, I'm pretty sure it's from a magma chamber. Okay, I'm gonna put these guys here. That way we know what we've looked at. It's this one. This one would have been from a magma chamber, I'm pretty positive. Like really sharp, really sharp, really. Like if you were walking, you fell on this, you would seriously hurt yourself, seriously hurt yourself. And this is quartz, right? This sharp stuff. And this is the felt spar that we're showing where the stream got worse than a leg, worse than a leg, the felt spars, right? That you find with lots of igneous rocks. See that? And this is smooth, by the way, gang. Smooth-ish, it wouldn't give you a very satisfying back scratch, right? Very satisfying back scratch. I'm gonna turn off my camera again, gang. Oh, I gotta get above the sun. Turn off my camera again, and we're gonna look at the crystals in their full glory without the... My video being in the way. Infinity Gem. You got full warlock. I'm gonna snap my fingers and everybody comes back. I'm gonna show you this guy, too. I love shale. So here's a nice piece of shale that I picked up. Check this one out. This is a nice piece of shale. I love this thing. Look at the layers on that, right? And this one I picked up in Ontario. Ontario's got a lot of clay, a lot of shale, right? And shale is clay that becomes solid. Now take a look at this thing. This one's loose. Should we cut this off? Should we take this off? There's nothing in there, so there's no fossil, so we won't. Okay. Oh, a little bit comes off. Take a look, this one came out of here. See this? Oh, this is getting loose, too. This is getting loose, too. I'm gonna put this one back. Doop! Yeah, most of these I found myself. Beautiful layered, fairly smooth, secret compartment. Ha, ha, ha, ha, it fell off. Let's put it back. We'll keep it in there. Okay. We'll keep it in there. So that's a shale as well. What else? What else? Oh, we've already looked at this one. I'm gonna move everything over here that we've looked at already. That way. And we've looked at these guys. Take a look at this thing. Take a look at this thing. This one's super cool. Those are like little mini crystals. What a crazy universe this would find. Anything like that in Europe where I live. Doubt it. I don't know. I don't know what crystal mineral hunting is like in Europe. I'm pretty sure there's gotta be some. These gotta be quartz. So this is, I think, well, I wouldn't say the smallest quartz crystals I have, but defined wise, tribbles. Was this like a cave or where it was such a, was this in a cave? Maybe. I don't think, no, I haven't been, I've been inside caves for sure, but I don't remember collecting any crystals from caves I might have. I don't know. Super cool though. I really like this one. And it's rough. As you can tell with my fingers, I've been playing around with these crystals, like feeling them. And when you feel them, you know, you're gonna, your fingers are gonna get on the rough side, right? Ah, it belongs there. Well, a lot of caves have amazing, like some of the biggest crystals you've ever seen in your life, you would have found in caves, especially the quartz crystals. There's, if you do a search for quartz crystals, like there's pictures of quartz crystals that are as big as a house inside caves that people have found. And the deeper you go into the crust, the bigger the crystals get because they cool slowly, right? Here's another tourmaline. Oh, this is the one that belongs to this guy. Probably, is it? No, that's too big. 10 bucks for you if you use it to exfoliate next shower. No, definitely not. That would exfoliate way more than the exfoliation required. That would take off your skin. So this is tourmaline, black tourmaline, and I'm pretty sure this is green tourmaline. See that? So you've got black tourmaline here and you've got green tourmaline here. I believe it's called green tourmaline. Two crystals right beside each other. Same structure, different mineral composition. Here's another feldspar. This one's beautiful, I love this. This has got a greenish tint to it, right? And these feldspar's have this structure, this rhombohedron, not rhombohedron. I forget what the crystal structure is on it. It's 3D. And there's so much geometry and crystals. So much geometry and crystals. It's absolutely amazing. Look at that. Look at that, beautiful. And I believe this angle there is a 90 degree angle, or 80, this angle here, I think it's 88 or 87 degrees or something like this. That's the crystal structure formation. I forget what it is exactly. Tetrahedron, thank you very much. Is that what it is, Cheryl? Did they naturally have a sheen because of the structure or did you pull? Yeah, no, this is natural. I don't have any minerals or crystals that have been shined. This is like the actual crystal hasn't been shined. Okay, and I found this in nature. Beautiful, beautiful, smooth. Just like these ones, right? It's the same thing with different color. Same guy, different color, just different mineral composition. Oh, I've got a lot of little guys. I'll show you the magnetite again, because I love this thing. I went around, I knew I had magnetite. And it's very difficult. Let me take a look at this, right? So here's two rocks, two rocks that seem to be identical, right? Like they seem to be identical, almost identical. My magnet's stuck to the other. So they seem to be identical, right? Very much so, right? Check out this one. Nope, right? This is a magnet that we have, right? No, not magnetic. Oh, a little bit maybe. A little bit. Check out this one, right? You can actually pick it up, right? Take it out. So this is magnetite, strong magnetite. This one, it's got a little bit of movement on it. I can feel it on my hand. Just the slightest, maybe, okay? But this one, boom, that it's magnetic. Yeah, like this one. Let's see if we can make a little bit of movement on it. Like, let's see. Oh, see it? Yeah, it works. Okay, so this one, I forget what the name for it is. If you attach a magnet to it, it takes on some of the magnetic properties and becomes magnetic slowly, but then it doesn't retain its magnetism, right? I forget what the name of these types of rocks is. It might be sort of a pseudo magnetite, but the ones that retain their magnetics, right? That doesn't go away, it doesn't need an external magnetic force to keep it magnetic, it's called magnetite. So this one straight up magnetite, this one, you can keep a magnet there and it slowly becomes a little bit magnetic, right? And then I have three other ones that are magnetites. Cool? Is it because of iron deposits or because of the structure? It's because of both, the iron deposits and the structure. So I actually still know a lot more about these, right? Because when you can find magnetite, then there might be mineral deposits there that you can extract out, like carbon and gold and silver and stuff like this, right? So that's what they use. When you use magnetic surveys and geophysics and stuff, what you're doing is, you're looking for sort of minerals that appear with the resources, the gold or whatever that you're trying to extrapolate, right? Or get out, check this one out. Here's another, pyrite. Look at the little crystal, look at the little perfect pyrite there. See that guy? Cubic, we've got the sun shining on the rocks right now. Look at all that beautiful pyrite. Beautiful structures, right? Pyrite is very common and that's why they used to call it the fool's gold. Let's put this with the other pyrite we have. Here's another igneous rock. You can see the felt spars in there. There's a rare, slightly magnetic rock only found in my area called cumber lanite, carbon lanite, that actually rings a bell. That's my PC fan. We've got the sun shining right now on the computer and on my face and on the lens. So the computer's going, it's hot here. Love it. Thank you. X, the sun is perfect for this. Very cool. Let's do more, let's do more. This one is super cool. This is the one I've showed, we showed in the previous one. Let me show you this one as well. Let me show you this one as well. My favorite crystal is the legal kebab says, right? So this thing fell apart. Let me bring out, did I show you this one? I don't think I showed you this one. Look at this one. This one is sort of like one of the other rocks that we showed with the lid coming off, right? Look at the weathering on this. Look at the weathering on this, right? See the layer. So this, the mineral in that layer is more resilient to the weathering than the one surrounding it, right? So weathered more, weathered less, weathered more, weathered less, weathered more, weathered less. Look at the weathering on top of that. That's what we'll call it. She showed, you can pick up 1943 pennies with a magnet. They were made with zinc coated steel. Really? So there must be worth something, that's what we'll call it, yeah? What would be a total general estimate of when these were formed? Oh, it would be like, it varies. It varies a lot. Millions of years, right? The metamorphic rocks. Like this is a sedimentary rock that has gone through metamorphosis and is it sedimentary? It's clay. So I believe it's a clay. So it would have been deposited as a clay and then gone through metamorphosis and then weathered to this state. So it would have gone through like three stages. So we're talking millions of years, long ago, really long ago, but check out these ones. This crystal, I forget what the name of this is. This is super cool. One of my favorites. Look at the crystal structure on this. Keep in mind, we used to think that you couldn't make some of these crystals, right? Like diamonds, the price that people pay for diamonds is crazy because diamonds aren't that rare. And right now we can make diamonds, fake diamonds, zirconian, right? It still takes a little bit of time, but nothing like in nature. And a lot of people that know their gems would have a hard time telling the difference between the zirconium and a real diamond that formed in nature. Looks man-made, doesn't it? Super cool, super cool. Free assange, free assange, free assange, indeed. Check this one out. All of these are the same. It's gonna focus. Look at the mineral deposits on that. Remember in the 80s, those grow your own crystals. The geometry is insane. There's so much geometry in minerals and crystals and stuff. It's all geometry. It's beautiful. A lot of mathematics in this, right? A lot of mathematics. Like what defines crystals really is the geometry, the mathematics of it all. And there's a few other ones here. Some of these bigger pieces were all together and they washed and fell apart. Look at this. Look at this structure. Look at this. Look at that. Look at that. That's crystal that popped out, right? Let's see if we can get it focused. That's a crystal that popped out, this one and that one. What price? Yes, at the top of the Washington Monument is a rock of aluminum, which was rarer than platinum in early United States history, really. Now it's very common. Cool, cool. That, I read about a place in Yorkshire, England, where you can leave teddy bears in the water for 33 to five months and they petrified the stone due to the high PPM of mineral water. Really? That would be super cool. I brought a business on that. Go buy teddy bears and salamon and petrify them in three months and salamon and even or etsy. And it's also among the most abundant substances in the crust, but refining it is quite difficult. Wow, wow. What's the mineral called? Here's, take a look. Same crystals, right? Look up Julian Assange. He's a journalist and publisher that is trying to bring transparency and accountability of capital as power to humanity. We have a Julian Assange and WikiLeaks playlist that you can check out. Very important, very important person. This one, check it out. I think so. Same structure, right? Wonder how long these samples you're showing took to grow. The bigger the crystal, the longer it took, right? I don't know, how long would this take? Because what happens is the crystal structure of the mineral forms together and then slowly more come in attached to it. It's like a Lego building itself, right? So, good question, good question, good question. Take a look at this, oops. These are quartz and tourmaline. You can see the striations of the tourmaline here. And then take a look at this thing. This is the quartz, right? But there's striations on the quartz. But the striation isn't on the quartz. There used to be a big crystal of tourmaline that was here that this was attached to, right? So, the tourmaline formed and then the quartz came in and glued it all together. Here's another one. Take a look. That's a tourmaline crystal that popped out. See the striations in there? That's not the quartz striations. That's the tourmaline, right? But it's popped out. And again, it falls out, right? And here's these guys are felt spars, right? I believe so anyway. S-I-O-2, yeah. Such a simple structure, so strong, so strong. Amazing properties to it. Chichu Fiona says, thanks for the great science class. See you next time. See you next time, Fiona. Thank you for popping in. Fiona, before you go, check out this one. Check out this one. Here's another one, which is absolutely beautiful. Look at the structure on this. Look at the structure on this. We'll call this one the last one we look at right now. Look at that. I don't know what this one's called. It's so trippy. Looks like some kind of fungus that's growing, but it's rock. Some kind of mineral. And then the white stuff. I don't know what the white is on there. Yeah, miniature landscape indeed. Like these are quartz, crystals, very jaggedy. These guys here, very jaggedy. Like it's ripping my fingers, the skin, right? What is that? Look at that. What is that? Asteroid flying through the universe, maybe. Yeah, me too, Cheryl. I absolutely love this one. And I have no idea what it is. Look at that hole in there. Oh, what kind of creature lives in there? You think it's wood? I don't know if it's, I don't think it's petrified wood. I don't think it's petrified wood. Tichofiona says parts of it look like the bottom of a mushroom. Yeah, indeed, right? Fungus, but what is it? Cool. Cool. Let me put this one here too. So we don't have that much more that we need to take a look at. We've got a bunch here. Oh no, I have a whole tray of little guys here. Take a look. I got a tray of little guys that we can take a look. And this one, take a look at this one, is a green feldspar too. But we'll take a look at these another time game. And here's, oh, look at this. This is my garnet, I believe. I'll show you the garnet too, why not? Look at this, I think this is garnet. It's gotta be garnet. Eat it, ha ha. When we emote about these things, our responses usually come from a brain determining if it's food. This is super cool, I like this. Animal vegetable rock. I'm gonna turn on my camera. Apologies about losing the stream halfway through. Sort of couldn't do anything about it, okay? We are one with nature, indeed. We are nature, right? We talk politics, not today, not today, not today. We keep politics on politics streams from now on. Or we started doing that a while ago. I know, I know. But we did, I'm doing an appearance on a show on Wednesday. They asked me to go on there and talk politics, economics. I'm gonna be on there. If you look at our Patreon page, our schedule's set up. On Wednesday at 11 o'clock in the morning, we're doing a sort of online discussion with them. And I believe they said they usually have the video up the day of, so on Wednesday or latest by Thursday. So if you wanna see a politics discussion, the one we had yesterday I'll have up in the next couple of days, two, three days. But on Wednesday, I'm gonna be on there show talking politics and they'll have the video up either Wednesday or Thursday, okay? Gang, aside from that, thank you very much for being here. I hope you enjoyed the display, okay? If you wanna know what this is all about, I am on Patreon, patreon.com.force.chicho. C-H-Y-C-H-O. Everything's layered on mathematics. I don't put anything behind pay walls. everything's creative comments, share and share a like. My pleasure Cheryl. Thank you for being here. Our grandest dream about this. It just happens to be so, right? For those of you that have been supporting this work on Patreon, gang, my appreciation for supporting this work. It is in large part because of your support that we're able to do this and I think the whole community appreciates it. So, our thanks. Okay. We are live streaming on twitch gang twitch.tv forward slash chicholive, c-h-y-c-h-o-l-i-v-e. If you want to participate in these discussions live in the chat that's happening here, twitch is where you want to be at and for those of you who are following, subscribing, using points, donating bits for participating in the discussion and in our community. Thank you very much for being here and mods. Thank you very much for taking care of business. I do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on Minds, Lo, VK, Gap, Parler when it comes back online and Twitter and we do share additional information on those platforms as well and you can come to our twitch page anytime you want and in the chat type in exclamation mark, social and all the links will pop up including a link to our discord page where slowly our community is growing. We've got 700 plus people there sharing information talking and just lurking. Thank you very much Leith, K9 Leith. Appreciate the link and gang. Where are we? Where is my intro? For live streams where we don't have any visuals which we did today, we will be uploading the audio to soundcloud.com over slash chichou, c-h-y-c-h-o as a podcast and those podcasts should be available on your favorite podcasting platform including Spotify and iTunes and we will be uploading this live stream the first part and this part to both YouTube, BitShoot, Rumble and Odyssey. Those are the four platforms that we're active on right now uploading our videos. May they be live streams or recorded. We started on YouTube 15 years ago okay and on BitShoot about three years ago and this year in the beginning of 2021 we introduced Rumble and Odyssey. At some point we're going to take the 1000 plus videos that we have on YouTube and upload them to the other three platforms as well okay and we'll see where that goes. If you're on those platforms you can support this work by liking, sharing, commenting, subscribing and if you're on YouTube you can join YouTube membership and there's a link there and there's a handful of you that have joined YouTube membership supporting this work. Thank you very much for the support gang. Aside from that everyone we got a handful of videos here, videos here, rocks here, rocks and minerals and crystals to take a look at. We'll take a look at them at another date and what I'll do I'll bring some of my partners crystals that we've looked at in the previous mineral crystal video the first one we put out and take a look at them close up in this in this guy right here and they deserve a good close-up look. Gang I hope you have a fantastic Sunday and I'll see you in tomorrow's or Tuesday's live stream where we're going to do mathematics crystals it's all about the mathematics the geometry of it right? Let's do a little mathematics on Tuesday if you can make it. Bye everyone.