Ant Fact of the Day:
-
Ant Fact of the Day:
"Ant Garnets" are tiny red gems found by ants. I know this sounds made up ... but it's real.
Harvester ants dig deep nests (up to 6m!) and they bring the soil to the surface grain by grain. Sometimes they find garnets, tiny precious red gemstones.
These are waste to the ants: they end up in the spoil heap around the nest. When it rains, the lighter stone washes away, the garnets from deep in the earth remain.
Those in the know can collect them from the surface.
@futurebird I saw some at one of the gemologists I buy stones from and bought a pair for earrings. Most beautiful garnet I've seen in my career so far.
-
Ant Fact of the Day:
"Ant Garnets" are tiny red gems found by ants. I know this sounds made up ... but it's real.
Harvester ants dig deep nests (up to 6m!) and they bring the soil to the surface grain by grain. Sometimes they find garnets, tiny precious red gemstones.
These are waste to the ants: they end up in the spoil heap around the nest. When it rains, the lighter stone washes away, the garnets from deep in the earth remain.
Those in the know can collect them from the surface.
Filing this away for the next time I’m in Arizona.
In Colorado, north of Steamboat Springs, there was a garnet ledge above the Strawberry Park hot springs. My mom and I went looking; sure enough, there were garnets on the rocks. It made her so happy to relive an old memory.
-
@futurebird I saw some at one of the gemologists I buy stones from and bought a pair for earrings. Most beautiful garnet I've seen in my career so far.
It annoyed an ant so much she dragged it from deep in the earth just to get it out of her home. "too sparkly, too red, too hard and in my way!"
That is why they are so nice. LOL.
-
Ant Fact of the Day:
"Ant Garnets" are tiny red gems found by ants. I know this sounds made up ... but it's real.
Harvester ants dig deep nests (up to 6m!) and they bring the soil to the surface grain by grain. Sometimes they find garnets, tiny precious red gemstones.
These are waste to the ants: they end up in the spoil heap around the nest. When it rains, the lighter stone washes away, the garnets from deep in the earth remain.
Those in the know can collect them from the surface.
This brings up a question in my mind, How do ant dislodge grains of soil when it’s hard? For example, I grew up in a desert where the ground could be really hard. And yet the ants were there. Are there special digger ants with jackhammer heads?
-
This brings up a question in my mind, How do ant dislodge grains of soil when it’s hard? For example, I grew up in a desert where the ground could be really hard. And yet the ants were there. Are there special digger ants with jackhammer heads?
persistANTS
-
It annoyed an ant so much she dragged it from deep in the earth just to get it out of her home. "too sparkly, too red, too hard and in my way!"
That is why they are so nice. LOL.
@futurebird one ant's trash is a jeweler's treasure

-
Ant Fact of the Day:
"Ant Garnets" are tiny red gems found by ants. I know this sounds made up ... but it's real.
Harvester ants dig deep nests (up to 6m!) and they bring the soil to the surface grain by grain. Sometimes they find garnets, tiny precious red gemstones.
These are waste to the ants: they end up in the spoil heap around the nest. When it rains, the lighter stone washes away, the garnets from deep in the earth remain.
Those in the know can collect them from the surface.
@futurebird so I was just writing this information to my wife and realized I completely unironically described you as "my favorite myrmecologist"
-
persistANTS
@futurebird Once again, you have managed to win the entire internet. Good job.
-
Ant Fact of the Day:
"Ant Garnets" are tiny red gems found by ants. I know this sounds made up ... but it's real.
Harvester ants dig deep nests (up to 6m!) and they bring the soil to the surface grain by grain. Sometimes they find garnets, tiny precious red gemstones.
These are waste to the ants: they end up in the spoil heap around the nest. When it rains, the lighter stone washes away, the garnets from deep in the earth remain.
Those in the know can collect them from the surface.
@futurebird I've always wanted some ant garnets

-
@futurebird so I was just writing this information to my wife and realized I completely unironically described you as "my favorite myrmecologist"
@kyonshi Is there any other way to describe @futurebird...?

-
J jwcph@helvede.net shared this topic