Geary County — Rockhounding in Geary County, Kansas
Geary County is a mapped rockhounding spot in Geary County, Kansas. Reported finds include agatized wood. Below: coordinates, access notes, nearby spots, and trip-planning links.
Map showing Geary County in Geary County, Kansas
Quick details
- Access
- Public area
- County
- Geary County
- State
- Kansas
- Nearest road
- Truman/Eisenhower Presidential Highway
- Postcode
- 66441
- Coordinates
- 38.99986, -96.84217
Land & collecting status
Generally open to casual rockhounding
Most public-tagged spots sit on BLM, U.S. Forest Service, or other federal land where reasonable hand collecting of common rocks and minerals is allowed. Confirm posted rules and active mining claims before you dig.
Public-land rules vary by agency, season, and field office. The RockHoundR app pulls live BLM, USFS, NPS, and tribal overlays so you can see exactly which agency manages the ground at this spot.
Sources & verification
Spot details combine the public RockHoundR location dataset, normalized mineral labels, agency land-status checks in the app, and community submissions. Coordinates are approximate until verified in the field.
Sources: RockHoundR public spot dataset, app land overlays, and local agency review before each trip.
Found at Geary County
Each chip opens all spots that produce that material; the encyclopedia link opens the full ID and field guide.
Nearby rockhounding spots
Other rockhounding spots within driving distance of Geary County.
- Junction CityGeary County, Kansas · 2 mi awayGeode
- Republican RiverGeary County, Kansas · 4 mi awayAgate, Jasper
- Smoky Hills RiverDickinson County, Kansas · 10 mi awayAgatized Wood
- StockdaleRiley County, Kansas · 23 mi awayGarnet
- Strong CityChase County, Kansas · 44 mi awayChalcopyrite, Geode
- Rock City ParkOttawa County, Kansas · 49 mi awayConcretion
- Big Blue RiverMarshall County, Kansas · 49 mi awayAgate, Chalcedony, Chert
- FlorenceMarion County, Kansas · 52 mi awayGeode
Across the state line from Geary County
Geary County is close enough to the Kansas border that the next-closest rockhounding spots are in a neighboring state. Worth knowing if you are already on the road.
