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Dwarves' Earth Treasures Museum:
Sugar Bowl Thundereggs
Sugar Bowl Mine, Florida Mtns, Luna Co., New Mexico
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   The name "Sugar Bowl" refers to the sugar-like quartz crystals lining the white geode centers within the thundereggs' dark colored agate cores. The agate in the thundereggs are usually gray, and they can come in white, gray and black colors. Several mining attempts (including backhoeing) were made at the Sugar Bowl Mine only to discover that the pockets of thundereggs was very small and scattered, and because of that, that area is abandoned and open to rockhounding. There is a great view to the east that even the most western mountains of New Mexico, Texas and Mexico (150 km / 70 miles away) can be seen from the mine.
    I explored the dumps that have been dumped by the backhoe and found a number of good thundereggs as if they have been overlooked by the previous miners. One dump (from one pocket) produced some thundereggs containing interesting type of reddish to yellowish sagentite taking on the forms of plume, blades, ferns, and moss.  After finding few thundereggs at random locations around Sugar Bowl mine, I think that it is possible to locate more of such small pocket if one is willing to keep digging (or better, back-hoeing) to find them.
YOU CAN CLICK ON THE PICTURES TO SEE LARGER PICTURES
Rough Appearance:  Brown to tan thundereggs with obvious flow banding.
Agates are usually grayish sometimes with black and white colors.

The specimens below were bought as rough and they were cut and polished by Jeffrey A.

Classic Sugar Bowl Thundereggs with bright white geode center.

Unusual structure With Calcite pseudomorph
Rare constrasting black and white colors Sugar Bowl with inclusions

Move on to the Next Page to See the Speicmens I found/Dug up.

You can see some Sugar Bowl Thundereggs for Sale at the Online Agate & Thunderegg Shop