I am a part of a local mineral club which hosts several "field trips" a year to various mineralogically interesting locations (most of which aren't accessible as an individual, like private land and special digs at active mining/quarrying sites on their days off). I have never found anything even remotely as beautiful as the specimens shown, but the small collection of mildly interesting things that I've smashed out of the earth with my own 2 hands is amazingly satisfying to me. You don't even have to be a super dedicated "rock nerd" to take part, I highly recommend looking for local mineral clubs to join if this even remotely interests you. It's really a ton of fun!
The asbestos formations are ones they keep behind glass.
I still have a lot of it.
There is an idea that minerals are these inorganic substances but fully two thirds of all minerals identified were originated from direct or indirect interaction with living things on Earth. In fact a recent hypothesis holds that minerals have evolved since the formation of the solar system very much like living things, getting more and more complex via selective processes. See https://hazen.carnegiescience.edu/research/mineral-evolution
https://carnegiemnh.org/explore/hillman-hall-of-minerals-and...
Spent many hours there
https://www.hmns.org/exhibits/cullen-hall-of-gems-and-minera...
(Post Malone’s response in a Joe Rogan interview when asked about McKenna’s Stoned Ape Theory)
I don't see any god though, but I think I saw godzilla hiding in one of those shapes.
"They are not rocks, they are minerals marie"