Nowhere, they have enough in North Dakota.
And Colorado as well. Many cities have rock shops that you might be able to work out a deal with, the price offered will be extremely low, because they know where to get it for free, so consider a swap for something else or a credit at the shop, or even a discount line for a specific period of time.
Some, but certainly not all is pure junk, there are pieces that externally are drab and when slabbed and polished are interesting and of value, but don't expect to get rich on "P" wood. I have a backyard filled with it, stumps, logs, branches, chips and debris, Palm or decideous, it is precious stuff, but lumps of coal would be nicer on a cold winter night, P-Wood won't burn and keep me warm this winter.
This answer is bogus if you cut it down and polish it it is worth ALOT!!! i am not sure where you can sell it but i was watching the geogrophy channel an they wwere sayin how you can sell it plain too for like 50 bucks a pound
If that wood is from a protected area (as many petrified forests are) then yes; you have stolen the material and are attempting to sell it.However, if the wood was legally obtained (whether you own the land it came from or it was a legal gift from some native tribe/group, etc.) then you may pf course do whatever you like with it, up to and including sale.
Petrified wood can have a distinctive smell due to the minerals and compounds that have replaced the organic material during the fossilization process. This can release odors when the petrified wood is broken or exposed to air.
No, a glacier would not be able to leave behind petrified wood. Petrified wood forms when wood is buried underground and minerals slowly replace the organic material, a process that takes thousands to millions of years. Glaciers can transport and erode materials, but they do not create petrified wood.
Petrified wood can be up to 10 times heavier than regular wood because the organic material in the wood is replaced by minerals during petrification, increasing its density.
Yes, petrified wood can opalize. Opalization occurs when silica-rich water seeps into the pores of the wood and replaces the original organic material with opal, resulting in a fossilized wood with opal instead of its original cellular structure. This process can create beautiful opalized specimens.
Petrified Wood
If that wood is from a protected area (as many petrified forests are) then yes; you have stolen the material and are attempting to sell it.However, if the wood was legally obtained (whether you own the land it came from or it was a legal gift from some native tribe/group, etc.) then you may pf course do whatever you like with it, up to and including sale.
The streak of petrified wood is black or brown. The streak can also be white.
...the petrified forest...
Petrified wood.
petrified wood
The Petrirfied Forest is a forestis petrified that petrified by wood in the Petrified Forest. Wirten By Valeria Roman Barrios 23
Petrified wood has turned to stone, a type of fossil, It is unlikley that you would be able to burn it.
Petrified wood can have a distinctive smell due to the minerals and compounds that have replaced the organic material during the fossilization process. This can release odors when the petrified wood is broken or exposed to air.
petrified wood
I am looking for petrified wood byers. I have a large selection of unused, from 1lb. to 50lb. pieces.
No, a glacier would not be able to leave behind petrified wood. Petrified wood forms when wood is buried underground and minerals slowly replace the organic material, a process that takes thousands to millions of years. Glaciers can transport and erode materials, but they do not create petrified wood.