At the center, giant lepidolite orbs alternate with leafy green serpentine doughnut rondels and small rounds of what's called syenite sodalite. It comes from my homelands, colloquially called Yooperlite.
光る路傍の石、ユーパーライト。 Yooperlite syonite clast containing fluorescent sodalite Upper Peninsula, Michigan, USA #鉱物標本
(one possible interpretation of Eoandromeda is that it's a ctenophore but it might not even be an animal, and yooperlite is a plutonic rock, so those answers are ALMOST right) and those who DO aren't going to be asking AI. We've created THIS GUY (the absolute best one-off Adventure Time character)
Alt: a cartoon of a pale blue cat-like creature with yellow eyes, the Demon Cat of Approximate Knowledge, standing in a gloomy dungeon underground. "I have approximate knowledge of many things"
It's also very hard to fact-check a lot of AI answers that are on technical questions. The other day, Google's AI Overview told me that Eoandromeda is a fossil ctenophore. Today, it told me yooperlite is a volcanic rock. Most people don't have the background knowledge to spot those slight errors,
Seeping Bear! Its on my to-do list but I have yet to get to it. Yooperlite is a relatively new (in discovery) in the area. www.michigan.org/article/guid...
Michigan beaches are a rock hound’s paradise with Petoskey stones, Lake Superior agates and more. Now you can add Yooperlites® to your list of rocks to find!
wait I've never even heard of Yooperlite and I spent a couple weeks every summer in the UP when I was a kid, and have spent time around Sleeping Bear Dunes and Northport
I have a couple from stores and such! But I wanna FIND MY OWN, MY OWN SPECIAL ROCK. Or if I somehow find Yooperlite (doubtful)
wish i had someone to go yooperlite hunting with