Granite, and similar quartz rich igneous rocks <"Igneous">, won't change your water chemistry - <"Aquarium sand and diatoms...">.what are the most common inert rock types to use?
The easiest way to tell is just by shape. Basically any rock that is a <"rounded pebble or cobble"> won't, only old, really hard rock, forms water <"rounded spherical shapes">.but what other rocks don't interact with you water parameters?
They can be sedimentary, they just have to be really hard - <"Millstone Grit - Wikipedia">. Most igneous rock will be hard, it is only in <"exceptional circumstances"> that it won't be.I hadn't clocked that rounded rocks are going to be non sedimentary
So basically the water has dissolved all the limestone (CaCO3) it can already. All of us who have limestone aquifer water will have water of 17 - 18 dGH & dKH, that value is caused by the atmospheric CO2 level and is the equilibrium point at ~420 ppm CO2 - <"Trends in CO2 - NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory">.but didn't know the cut off point was quite so high, but applies to me since, I have tap of water of roughly those Gh and KH and I of course live in an area where water comes off chalk.
Is Rihno stone a bit of the same you think?I use slate as an inert rock in one of my aquariums. Because of the fracture pattern of slate it doesn't really form rounded spherical shapes so much as blocky or flat shardy type of shapes and "chippings". You can get it in large flat sheets which is convenient for some purposes and it's relatively easy to cut using a diamond Dremel cutting wheel.
Unlikely these days unfortunately, water companies aren't really <"encouraging visitors"> .............If by the way, you ever organise a sewage farm tour to give an illustrated talk on aerobic bacteria, biological oxygen demand, safe effluent discharge into rivers, Tubifex worms etc., sign me up.....
It's hard to know what 'rhino' stone is... this sort of terminology can easily be vendor-specific. It does not look like slate to me. "It is a sedimentary crumb rock with a beautiful blue shade and a minimalist structure on the surface." If that is to be believed it rules out slate. "a metamorphic rock from the Pleistocene period" Marketing droids just make all this stuff up. "Wild blue rhino stone is a premium bluish-gray cobblestone collected from the riverbed in Eastern Europe" maybe, maybe not. I definitely believe the "premium", as in premium price part.Is Rihno stone a bit of the same you think?
Most common inert rocks for aquariums:The title says it all, what are the most common inert rock types to use?
I know lava rocks and dragon stones are inert, but what other rocks don't interact with you water parameters?
As a kid, last year or two of primary school, my friends and I, those who had tropical aquariums, and there were at least five of us in our little group, used chiefly sandstone, inert, and not even metamorphic. We collected it from an abandoned quarry, sorry health and safety was largely ignored/unknown in my childhood. We also used metamorphic and granite, volcanic of course, we rather proudly knew that as kids, illegally collected from beaches, by bicycle, choppers and the like, dreadful bicycles, we realised that fairly quickly and slowly transitioned to more conventional bicycles. Funny how tropical fish provided an interest for so many of my contemporaries in the horrors of the early "Troubles" in Northern Ireland. Indeed one of my aquariums made on to TV as a symbol of 'life goes on', 1974 I think.limestone
We think <"that is Basalt"> - <"60P Variations">.I use Hakkai stone. Absolutely adore it.
Thank you for the geology report, Darrel!
I was thinking about the stones and based on image searches my guess was also basalt.
Mine speak Japanese, so I am sticking to my belief they used to live in a beatiful, clear stream in the land of the rising sun.🤪
You could "Pick You Own"? <"Probably not legally"> and definitely <"not anywhere near Kent">.it’s pretty much approaching impossible to find a set of such beautiful stones from wholesale retailers.
In the UK we have a source <"in W. Scotland and N. Ireland"> and I'd guess there is somewhere (on Skye?) where you could find something very similar.
<"This is Canna"> (which I visited in 2011), which might also do (or Rhum, Eigg etc), but you would need to carry your stones back on the ferry.
A long way, from Kent, but well worth it I'm sure.Skye
I think if you are a geologist Skye has a lot to offer.A long way, from Kent, but well worth it I'm sure.