Hello, folks! I just joined as a member, and I hope someone can offer me advice and guidance.
A couple of years ago my mother found this stone in her garden. She gave it to my son, who showed me and I thought it to be a nice example of cut glass or, maybe, some quartz. He kept bothering me to "check into what it really is," and I finally did that today, taking it to the local university and finding a couple of friendly geologists to look at it. Pretty quickly they decided it was a rather large, very nice piece of garnet. I asked what it was worth, and they said they had no idea. I asked if it had been cut (I thought it had), but they said no, that's the natural faceting of the stone (and they showed me a few pictures to prove the point -- I was rather taken aback).
That's why I'm here ... I'm trying to figure out where to take this thing to get an idea of value and what can be done with it (if anything).
I did weight it on our postal scale. It's about 1.2 oz, which according to the conversion website wolfram alpha comes out to be about 170 carats. (Wish it were a diamond!) The ruler in the picture is in inches. (I don't have one in metric scale.)
Any help will be much appreciated.

A couple of years ago my mother found this stone in her garden. She gave it to my son, who showed me and I thought it to be a nice example of cut glass or, maybe, some quartz. He kept bothering me to "check into what it really is," and I finally did that today, taking it to the local university and finding a couple of friendly geologists to look at it. Pretty quickly they decided it was a rather large, very nice piece of garnet. I asked what it was worth, and they said they had no idea. I asked if it had been cut (I thought it had), but they said no, that's the natural faceting of the stone (and they showed me a few pictures to prove the point -- I was rather taken aback).
That's why I'm here ... I'm trying to figure out where to take this thing to get an idea of value and what can be done with it (if anything).
I did weight it on our postal scale. It's about 1.2 oz, which according to the conversion website wolfram alpha comes out to be about 170 carats. (Wish it were a diamond!) The ruler in the picture is in inches. (I don't have one in metric scale.)
Any help will be much appreciated.
