Things You'll Need
Instructions
Surface Scratching for Rose Quartz
Find an area with quartz potential using the surface scratching method. These include:
Scratch over the area using a rake or hands to uncover minerals. Collect the minerals that stand out from the sand or mud. Place minerals in a collecting bag, a plastic bag, screen bottom box or bucket.
Dig out any areas that seem to be pockets holding minerals. Place the dirt in a bucket to allow you to carry it to an area where you can spread it out and sift through it.
Place finds that have the potential to be rose quartz into a wire bottom box and dip the box in water, allowing you to clean and sift through it. Rose quartz and rock quartz will have a shinier and more translucent appearance when wet than rocks.
Digging for Rose Quartz
Mark off an area to be dug out to find rose quartz. In a gem mining field, this might be a particular spot where you intend to dig up the earth by six to eight feet. In a mountainous area or an area where minerals are exposed due to water erosion or shifts in the earth, a segment can be selected to be dug out.
Dig the earth out using a shovel. Pile the dirt in one or two spots so that you or a partner can search the contents either by hand or using a screen bottom box before it is completely discarded. Minerals found in holes tend to occur after the several different layers have been dug out.
Dig around a potential pocket or geode if you find one. The pocket or geode will usually be harder than the previous dirt. Use a flashlight to look at the layers of dirt deep in hole when you are trying to find a pocket.
Use your hands to try to pull out the pocket without breaking any crystals off. Or dig under or to the side of the quartz to free it.
Place finds that have the potential to be rose quartz into a wire bottom box and dip the box in water, allowing you to clean and sift through it. Rose quartz and rock quartz have a shiny, translucent appearance when wet.
Fields that have been tilled for the purposes of rock finding at mining parks and attractions.
Areas where there is a lot of plate movement and shifting leaving veins exposed and minerals uncovered, like in the Northwest United States.
Old stream beds or current streams or creeks where water has washed the soil in such a way as to leave layers of earth with minerals exposed.
Exposed earth underneath newly fallen trees.