GARNET CORNER, YARROW CREEK NSW AUSTRALIA
This has always been one of my favourite gem
hunting spots along Yarrow Creek, made more so by the fact that the track to it
is often impassable, meaning months could go by before we could drive down to
it. The name was given by us and now the landowner uses it as well. It’s not
that the other Yarrow Creek gemstones are lacking at Garnet Corner but rather
that pyrope garnets are more abundant.
This naturally makes one suspect that the
source of the garnets is nearby, especially as the garnets are all quite rough
and irregular here, and this is where we have found our largest specimens
(several of around 30 carats). This has not been confirmed, but the geology of
this place is different from anywhere else along the creek.
Firstly, the granite outcrops cease abruptly and,
after a short space with no rock outcrops, a long but fairly narrow outcrop
of a different rock takes its place. This is a gabbro dyke and from its appearance on satellite
photos, it is almost certainly a ring dyke. Once past the dyke there is an
extensive area, almost circular, where again no outcrops are seen.
Garnet Corner is in the centre. The gabbro outcrop is to the left of it |
Secondly, geologists have decided that this is most
likely a diatreme, which would normally include fragments of rock brought up
from deep down in the Earth’s crust or even the mantle. Perhaps amongst these
are fragments which weather to release the garnets. Some prospecting for diamonds has taken place
in the nearby Kelly’s Hut Creek, but not only did this draw a blank, but even
the normal Yarrow Creek gemstones were absent.
There are outcrops of a pale, crystalline rock in
the creek bed at Garnet Corner, but nearly always what is found beneath the sand
and gravel is a distinctive green clay, which rapidly turns
Gabbro pieces in the alluvium |
brown when exposed
to the air. Digging into this has produced nothing of interest. However, it is
the chunks of gabbro which have washed down from the neighbouring hill that fossickers are looking for. Their rough surface holds onto the
abundant black spinel and the gem minerals.
Downstream of the first granite outcrops the
gabbro chunks (I can’t call them pebbles because they are never rounded)
rapidly disappear, so easily does this ferromagnesian-rich rock weather away.
We don’t know what happens above the last gabbro outcrop as this is on an
adjoining property to which we have no access. If there are garnets in the
alluvium there, then maybe there is some other origin for the garnets than the
one suggested here.
The fact remains, however, that Yarrow Creek and a
few of its tributaries are the only local source of pyrope garnet gems. Even
the tributary streams could well have prior courses of Yarrow Creek in their drainage
areas, something I have long suspected. It’s up to someone else to solve this
mystery. Meanwhile, I hope you get a chance to find some of these beautiful
gems at Garnet Corner.
All New England and other Geology blogs and videos
https://johnsbluemountainsblog.blogspot.com/2013/12/links-to-all-blog-entries-and-relevant.html All Blue Mountains blogs and videos
All New England and other Geology blogs and videos
Limestone Caves of NSW
Song Studies. Bible studies based on hymns and songs
Shoalhaven District Geology.
Your posts are great John.
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