The Mineral and Lapidary Museum of Henderson County is a non-profit, volunteer-run museum in Hendersonville, North Carolina, United States, founded in 1997 at 400 North Main Street in the middle of the city's Historic District.[1]
The Ultimate Guide to Asheville & The Western North Carolina Mountains explains that "The purpose of the museum is to support the education of the children of Henderson and neighboring counties in the Earth Science areas of Mineralogy, Geology, Paleontology and the associated Lapidary Arts. The museum has ongoing exhibits of regional minerals and gemstones of interest to the general public and a workshop where gem-cutting and polishing demonstrations are held."[2]
The guidebook further elaborates that "This museum is run by the Henderson County Gem and Mineral Society [HCGMS], a valuable source of information for those people interested in rock hounding in the mountains."[3] Prof. Ralph W. Bastedo, an HCGMS member and lecturer, notes that "Furthermore, the museum itself is a valuable learning tool in the Appalachian Mountains for adults seeking introductory and stimulating information about our planet earth generally."[4]
A six-foot-tall purple amethystgeode from Brazil is the largest geode on display.[6] Another exhibit features more than two dozen pairs of colorful quartz and calcite geodes from Mexico.
Among the gemstones exhibited are four replica versions of the Hope Diamond, including a reproduction of the large 18th-century French Blue Diamond.
Chunks of the 1901 Hendersonville iron-nickelmeteorite are displayed nearby. The museum also displays local Native Americanarcheologicalartifacts. The Garden Creek site in Haywood County showed evidence of human habitation from 8000 BCE. Remains of villages and earthwork mounds show construction in the late prehistoric era, as well as likely historic Cherokee.
Children are welcomed to touch the authentic (non-avian) dinosaur eggs on display. Laid by a duck-billed hadrosaur many millions of years ago during the late Mesozoic, these fossilized eggs were discovered in Hunan Province, China.
The museum has three giant tree trunks of petrified wood, permineralized by the passage of vast geologic time. Visitors may actually rest on these relics of the distant, deep past.