Things You'll Need
Instructions
Purchase or borrow a book on agates from a bookstore or library. If you know collectors, maybe they will lend you books and pamphlets for identifying agates. The rough forms can look like ordinary rocks until you turn them over. Some are covered with nodules; you will begin to recognize them with practice. Knowing about the outer, lumpy, rough-rock appearance is quite helpful. Alternately, study images online, or go to a rock shop to look for rough samples.
Check with local rock shops, rock hunting groups and collectors to learn about local areas where you can find agates in natural settings, or places that allow you to hunt and dig.
Go early in the day or late in the evening to beach areas where sandstone cliffs may drop deposits of agates periodically. These get washed up onshore and range in size from tiny to a foot across. The larger ones are usually hardest to identify, but the small ones can be seen in the lower slope of sunlight. The angle of the sun lights the stones from behind so they stand out almost like glass.
Walk in the desert or volcanic-ash bed areas known for agate deposits. Make sure you take plenty of water. Look for the bumpy rocks with banded areas, or look for geodes and geode pieces. Chunks and pieces of colored rock can also clue you in to favorable areas.
Dig in areas that either ask a fee or offer permitting for legal rock collecting. Some mineral crystal areas will yield a variety of agates, carnelian and jasper, too.
Hike in the mountains and foothills, or at lakefronts and riverbeds, keeping a keen eye out for the variety of specimens known to be in the area. Some rock shops will have guide maps indicating popular sites.