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1/16/2026

Don't Miss Out on the Opportunity for Adventure with Ivan Pojarevski at the 2026 RMGM Tucson Mineral & Fossil Tent Show

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Don't Miss Out on the Opportunity for Adventure with Ivan Pojarevski at the 2026 RMGM Tucson Mineral & Fossil Tent Show
By Rachel Ford
At the 2026 RMGM Tucson Mineral & Fossil Show, collectors and enthusiasts will have an opportunity to meet a scientist whose passion for minerals extends far beyond display cases and into the very heart of their geological formation. Ivan Pojarevski, a retired mineralogist and Honoured Doctor in Gemology of the Balkan Academy of Sciences, will be exhibiting in Booth 6A with material from his company, Bulgarian Gems & Minerals Co.

Pojarevski, now retired, has spent more than 45 years studying minerals through the study of crystal morphology. Crystal Morphology is the external shape, form, and growth pattern of a crystal, determined by its internal atomic structure and influenced by growth conditions like temperature, pressure, and additives, resulting in characteristic features like faces, edges, and angles that dictate its physical properties. "I am not a collector in the traditional sense," Ivan explains, "but a researcher who has spent decades assembling minerals to understand their formation and history." Pojarevski's lifelong curiosity has taken him deep underground and across the surface of mineral localities in Bulgaria and its surrounding regions, always driven by the scientific mysteries locked in stone.
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Rare multicolored cleophane (transparent sphalerite) from the Androvo Mine, Bulgaria. A highly collectible zinc sulfide mineral prized for its exceptional dispersion, nearly 20% higher than diamond, and occasional use as a faceted gemstone. The rarest cleophane color is green.
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Exceptional giant ruby crystal from the Republic of North Macedonia, featuring a perfect hexagonal form and weighing 1.2 kg (2.65 lbs). This crystal will be exhibited alongside several other outstanding ruby specimens this year.
Collectors and Resalers visiting Booth 6A will see firsthand the unique specimens that have been the focus of Pojarevski's research and discuss them with Ivan himself, who knows the specimens inside and out. Among these are rare and stunning examples of galena with dramatic skeletal and cascading growth, rare sparkling orange thulite, highly aesthetic rainbow chalcopyrite, and a newly discovered transparent green sphalerite. The highlight of Bulgarian Gems and Mineral Co.'s exhibit this year is a truly extraordinary ruby crystal from North Macedonia, weighing 2.6 pounds and exhibiting an elegant hexagonal form. This exceptional ruby specimen will be part of a rather exclusive lot of ruby crystal specimens.

What truly sets Bulgarian Gems and Minerals Co. apart from other exhibitors is not just the material Pojarevski brings to shows; it is the story of the specimens' discovery and the experiences he offers others who wish to discover that story for themselves. About fifteen years ago, Ivan began inviting mineral enthusiasts to join him in the field on what he calls "collecting tours" aimed at "the curious people who like adventures, minerals, and gemstones." "My interest is always in research, and I need new specimens to study," he says. Out of that need grew a series of guided mineral-collecting adventures through Bulgaria and now into North Macedonia. These are not your typical itineraries or pre-set tourist outings. Pojarevski tailors each tour to individual participants' interests, preferences, and physical abilities. Whether a participant is a seasoned collector or someone who has never held a geological hammer, Ivan designs the tour for his participants.
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Close friends from the Netherlands during one of their visits to Bulgaria. This group has visited twice, and their most recent trip included an unforgettable adventure and a visit to the famous 9th of September Mine.
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Good friends from Bergamo, Italy. In the red jacket is Marko Sturla, President of the Mineralogical Association of Bergamo and a close friend for over seven years.
Over the years, Ivan has led 46 successful excursions with participants from 14 countries, exploring abandoned underground mines and diverse surface-collecting localities. "Each journey has yielded significant finds of galena, sphalerite (including black marmatite and transparent cleophane), pyrite, rhodochrosite, pink manganocalcite, quartz, and gemstones such as amethyst, opal, and varieties of agate and jasper," says Pojarevski. Collectors on these tours do more than gather specimens; they learn the science behind them as Ivan explains what makes each piece unique and how geological processes have shaped it over millions of years.
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"Part of my hobby," he says with a grin, "is to explain and discuss with people how and why the minerals look the way they do, and what their specific history is." Pojarevski curates more than just collecting trips; these tours are immersive opportunities to see geology in action, to learn from a lifetime of study directly in the field, and to connect with like-minded explorers who cherish both adventure and understanding. In addition to the educational aspect of the tours, participants enjoy the local landscape, visit historical and archaeological sites, and enjoy the balanced flavors of traditional Bulgarian food and drink. Participants are encouraged to immerse themselves in the culture that shapes the people of the landscape.
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A special memory with longtime friends from the USA at a traditional country-style restaurant in Bulgaria, following a winery visit in Plovdiv. From left to right: Pat and Zelda (Sedona, Arizona) and Anne and Cortney (Taos, New Mexico).
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Peter Knaus, and old collector and Swiss banks auditor. Peter is in love with Bulgarian tomatoes. He is pictured with some here named Pink Magic – which are "extremely tasty" according to Pojarevski.
For showgoers at Tucson, meeting Ivan at Booth 6A will be an experience beyond the typical dealer interaction. It is the opportunity to encounter someone whose life's work bridges science and exploration, someone who finds joy not in owning specimens (he is not a collector, he admits), but in a unique passion for understanding them and sharing that understanding with others. Whether you come to admire the exceptional specimens he brings, to hear the stories behind them, or to ask about joining one of his upcoming tours, Ivan's booth promises to be a destination for anyone who loves minerals, adventure, and discovery
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The RMGM Tucson Mineral & Fossil Tent Show runs daily from January 30 through February 14 in the Tent Show at 1920 N. Oracle Road in Tucson, Arizona. Hours are 10 - 6 daily, with the final day closing at 4. Admission and parking are free, food trucks are on-site, and the event continues RMGM's tradition of bringing together quality vendors and world-class materials for a family-friendly celebration of minerals, fossils, gemstones, meteorites, and more.
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Visit Bulgarian Minerals & Gems in Booth 6A of the RMGM Tucson Mineral & Fossil Tent Show.

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1/14/2026

In Memoriam of Scott Alan Kleine

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In Memoriam of Scott Alan Kleine
​by Kevin Dixon

​Well-known and widely beloved mineral dealer Scott Alan Kleine died of acute organ
failure in Rock Springs, Wyoming, on September 3, 2025, while traveling from his
longtime home in Reno, Nevada, to the fall mineral shows in Denver, where he had
been a fixture for many years. Scott had suffered a series of devastating health
issues during the last decade, and the rigors of travel and labor of shows had
become a struggle. Yet he dearly loved the fellowship and camaraderie of mineral
shows, and had determined to make it to Denver despite of his rapidly failing health.
He was 57 years old.

Scott was born August 29, 1968 in Chehalis, Washington, and adopted by loving
parents Carroyl Fayne Damon and Harry Walter Kleine, Jr. Growing up in Albany,
Oregon, precocious and energetic, he was a self-described “problem child” who
often found relief from the mundane through activities that, while highly creative,
were not always received by his parents and teachers with his same level of
enthusiasm.
​
Scott’s interest in minerals began when he was very young. He found focus and
direction during the summers of his high school years in the streams and rivers of
Northern California, exploring and dredging gold with his father. His interest and
expertise in gold continued growing throughout his lifetime.
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​After gradating from high school in 1987, Scott served in the U.S. Army. He received
basic training at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri, trained as a combat engineer and
explosives expert at Fort Campbell in Kentucky, and was deployed to the jungles of
Panama just prior to the U.S. operations to depose Panamanian dictator Manuel
Noriega. In Scott’s words, “I still had a lot of unfocused energy after high school. I
just needed to blow up some stuff to get it out of my system.”

After completing his service and receiving an honorable discharge from the Army,
Scott moved to Reno, where his mother was employed at the University of Nevada.
In 1996, he earned his B.S. Degree in Geology from the MacKay School of Mines at
UNR. He never married, and lived the rest of his life in the same apartment he first
moved into during college.

Scott started his mineral sales business after college under the name “Scott Kleine
Minerals,” and soon changed the company’s name to Great Basin Minerals. He did
occasional geologic field work for various Nevada gold mining firms during the mid-
1990s, but his focus grew with his business, and his passion for field-collecting
exploded, as did his knowledge of and expertise in Nevada minerals. Scott, and his
longtime crew including friends John Greenfield and Joe Swartz, soon became
familiar faces at many mineral shows, including shows in Tucson and Denver, where
his reputation for friendliness, enthusiasm, and deep knowledge of minerals grew. It
was during this period that Scott and I met, and our friendship also grew quickly.

​Scott’s many field-collecting accomplishments are well known. Among his most
notable discoveries are outstanding olivenite crystals in 1996, rare minerals and
chalcophyllite in 1999 at the Majuba Hill Mine, Nevada; superb, unique gold
specimens on matrix from the Olinghouse District, Nevada (Rocks and Minerals,
January-February 2004); lorandite from Mercur, Utah; benitoite from San Benito
County, California; amethyst from the Kingston Range, California; and smoky quartz
and amethyst scepters from Petersen Mountain, Nevada.

His most celebrated discovery was the world’s finest fresnoite crystals at the Junilla
Mine, San Benito County, California in 1999. That year, Scott dedicated the entire
summer to the property, and proved out his extensive knowledge and keen
geological instincts with the find, which was later documented in Mineralogical
Record, July-August 2018.

Scott was also well-known for the large number and wide variety of specimens he
brought to market through his collaborations with commercial mines and private
projects. Among the best of these came from Nevada mines: wulfenite from the
Mobile Mine, Goodsprings; orpiment and realgar from the Twin Creeks Mine; the
world’s finest getchellite from the Getchell Mine; stibnite and baryte from the
Murray Mine; baryte and calcite from the Meikle Mine, and many others.
In addition to his well-known Nevada discoveries, Scott also spent a lot of
time digging pegmatites in Colorado. He made significant finds on my claims
(and those of other friends including Jessica Foutch, Troy Hamilton and
Quentin Good) in the Pile’s Peak Batholith (amazonite, fluorite, quartz), in the
Tarryall Mountains (topaz, quartz, feldspar), and high among the cliffs of Mt.
Antero and Mt. White in the Collegiates Range (aquamarine, phenakite,
fluorite, smoky quartz).
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​Scott was not only a well-trained geologist, but he also had a seemingly
innate understanding of mineral systems, and a healthy dose of that
indefinable quality we all recognize in the field as belonging to someone very
special.  In all the many field collecting adventures we shared over the years,
he rarely failed to find something great.

In 2006, he located and opened a spectacular bi-color topaz pocket in the
Tarryalls which produced dozens of excellent crystals, and a very rare, intact
topaz & smoky quartz combination matrix specimen that now resides in Bryan
Lees' collection.

In recent years, Scott made a colorful impression at many shows, marketing a large
number of superb wulfenite and mimetite specimens mined by his close friend Keith
Wentz at the historic Rowley Mine, Maricopa County, Arizona. Keith’s efforts from
2010-2015 produced many of the finest specimens known from the locality. Most
recently, following Joe Swartz’s death in 2023, Scott presented Joe’s little-known,
but exceptional collection of U.S. and worldwide classic localities to the community,
much to the surprise and delight of collectors.

In his early years as a mineral dealer, Scott shared showrooms with a number of
other dealers, including Dr. Rob Lavinsky and Evan Jones. As my friendship with
Scott grew, we began sharing accommodations in Tucson, and soon we were setting
up together at many shows, including Dave Waisman’s short-lived San Rafael show
(a favorite), gold shows in Nevada, the Kansas City spring club show, and many
shows in Tucson, Denver, and Texas organized by Scott’s dear friend Sandra
Gonzales.

Scott’s gastronomic exploits are renowned, and he was a well-known and
accomplished grill master. His old barbecue accompanied him on most of our
field collecting trips, and during the 2000s-2010s, we hosted yearly parties in
Tucson where Scott's cooking was a central attraction. He proudly manned
the grills year after year, often long into the wee hours as more guests would
arrive, to make sure everyone was well-fed and no soul left hungry. He was
an excellent cook, as literally hundreds of people can attest.

Most recently, as his health issues became limiting, Scott found great joy in
less-taxing adventures like morel mushroom & artifact hunting in Kansas and
metal detecting in Alabama. He often accompanied me back to Kansas after the Denver Spring show, which always coincides with morel season at home. In 2017, Scott was thrilled to experience a bumper crop Kansas morel season, and went home with 15
or 20 quart jars filled with the dried delicacies. 

A coin collector since childhood and accomplished metal detectorist, Scott
shed tears of joy upon recovering his first gold coin in 2017 - a lifetime dream,
and a feat not accomplished by many detectorists - but one which Scott pulled
off many times in a ghost town near Mobile. At the time he died, his most
highly-prized possession was a Confederate Civil War button he also found in
Alabama. 

Besides writing more, to share the wealth of knowledge he humbly knew he
alone possessed, Scott's last, greatest wish was to find another historic gold
coin stash with his metal detector. That, and making it to the next show.

Upon learning of Scott’s death, Jessica Foutch and I closed our booth at the
Denver show and traveled to Wyoming, to make his final arrangements. A
few days later, Jacob Adams, Scott’s young friend who had volunteered to
drive him to Colorado and help with the show, completed Scott’s mission by
bringing his ashes to the Denver, where a number of Scott’s oldest friends
were able to spend a last few quiet moments in a private setting. Scott had
no living relatives, and he considered his friends, and the mineral community,
his family. Arrangements are being made for his remains to be interred at a
National Cemetery, with military honors.

In time, with the indispensable help of Scott’s friends and fellow Nevada
geologists Joe Blaylock and Rhonda Knupp of Reno, much of Scott’s
extensive collection of Nevada minerals will be made available to collectors.

My friendship with Scott Kleine spanned more than 30 years, and was among the
greatest of my life. I could never describe the huge amount of support and
encouragement he gave me in the mineral business, the countless happy hours and
days we spent exploring natural places in America, or how dear he was to me and my
family.
​
As I write this tonight, I am also preparing for the first show of my mineral career
without Scott Kleine somewhere nearby, as are his many friends, fellow mineral
dealers, and customers. The landscape will be forever changed.

Kevin Dixon
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Join this first annual memorial BBQ in Scott's honor at Mineral City in Tucson, Arizona around 6ish, February 5, 2026.

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1/4/2026

Generations of Fossils: Explore the Tynsky Legacy at the RMGM Tucson Mineral & Fossil Tent Show 2026

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Generations of Fossils: Explore the Tynsky Legacy at the RMGM Tucson Mineral & Fossil Tent Show 2026
By Rachel Ford
Tynsky’s Fossils traces its roots to the 1960s, when Sylvester “Switz” Tynsky and his sons, Robert (Bob) and James A. (Jim A.), opened one of the earliest nearshore sandwich-bed quarries in the Fossil Basin near Kemmerer, Wyoming. Over the following decades, the family expanded its quarry operations across multiple generations, contributing significant specimens to scientific research and museum collections. In 1984, Jim E. Tynsky further developed quarry operations on the Lewis family ranch, strengthening the family’s role in excavating fossils from the renowned Green River Formation.¹
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At the Tynskys Quarry near Kemmerer, Wyoming.
The late Jim Tynsky was a third-generation fossil digger. He owned and operated a fossil shop & Quarry near Kemmerer, Wyoming, for over 45 years. He found the first complete 3-toed horse, “The Dawn Horse,” a Protorohippus venticolum (also known as Eohippus) at Fossil Lake in Kemmerer. It is called “The Dawn Horse” because it is a sample of one of the earliest known members of the horse family, a small, dog-sized mammal from the Eocene Epoch (approx. 55 MYO) with four toes on its front feet and three on its hind feet. Specimens like this mark the beginning of horse evolution from dense forests to today's grasslands from the Green River Formation. It is currently on display at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.
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“The Dawn Horse” on display at the Smithsonian, collected by Jim Tynsky in September 2003.
Jim was a pioneer and one of the first collectors to participate in the Tucson Gem & Mineral Show. The Tucson Gem & Mineral Show, the core of the larger Tucson Gem, Mineral & Fossil Showcase, started in 1955 as a small club event by the Tucson Gem & Mineral Society (TGMS) (rockhounds) in a school cafeteria, growing from 15 vendors to the largest gem and mineral event in the world, hosting over 40 independent shows annually.
In 2019, after a colon cancer diagnosis, Jim sold the family business to his son, Rob Tynsky (4th-generation fossil collector/preparer), who grew up working in the quarry and preparing fossils, and to his wife, Kodi (daughter-in-law). He continued to live out his days digging and prepping fossils until his death on December 3, 2025. Jim was an instrumental member of the fossil collecting and preparation community as we know it today. His talent, wit, humor, and passion will be greatly missed. His presence and absence have forever changed the mineral and fossil community.
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Jim Tynsky
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Rob, Kodi, Bronson & Bryson
Rob and Kodi purchased the business with the intention of continuing the family legacy and carrying it forward for future generations. Today, Tynsky’s Fossils operates both a fossil gallery and an active quarry experience, offering the public hands-on access to Eocene-age fossils from Fossil Lake, one of the most significant freshwater fossil deposits in the world. Visitors can excavate and keep their own fossils while learning directly from a family with expertise spanning more than six decades. Through education, ethical quarrying practices, and public engagement, Tynsky’s Fossils continues to connect people with prehistoric life while preserving a deeply rooted family tradition in paleontology. ¹
That commitment to education, accessibility, and respect is something I have experienced personally. My son began collecting fossils at a very young age, digging them himself, learning to prep them, and selling minerals and fossils he dug and purchased for resale at shows across the country to build a serious personal collection. Throughout those formative years, the Tynskys were consistently approachable and generous with their time and knowledge. They treated my son, even when he was just nine years old, as a valued customer and fellow enthusiast rather than dismissing him as “just a kid.” Anyone who has spent time in this business or hobby understands how much that level of respect truly says about a company.
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Come see these “Twins” in person! A large palm frond (positive & negative) from the Green River Formation. (52 MYO
That long-standing family legacy comes full circle in Tucson, where visitors are warmly invited to stop by Space 50 at the RMGM Tucson Mineral and Fossil Tent Show and meet Rob and Kody in person. They have been part of the show since its first year in 2022, and their continued presence reflects both their dedication to the event and their commitment to sharing fossils and stories with the community. Whether you come with years of collecting experience or simple curiosity, a visit to Space 50 is an opportunity to connect, ask questions, and experience firsthand the passion that continues to carry the Tynsky tradition forward.
The RMGM Tucson Mineral and Fossil Tent Show takes place at 1920 N. Oracle Rd., in Tucson’s “mineral district”, running January 30 through February 14, 10-6. daily (closing at 4 on the final day). The show opens early on January 23 with three wholesale-only dealers and Jeanne’s Rock Shop. Admission and on-site parking are free, and the event is open to both wholesale and retail buyers. With its friendly atmosphere, high-quality fossils and minerals, and hands-on opportunities such as meeting Rob and Kody, the Tent Show is the perfect destination for collectors, families, and anyone curious about Earth’s natural wonders.
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Come see Tynsky's Fossils, Inc. in booth 50 at the RMGM Tucson Mineral & Fossil Show
Source: Tynsky’s Fossils, “About Tynsky’s Fossils,” used with permission.
Photos: Courtesy of Tynsky’s Fossils, RMGM Promotion’s Ad

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    Rachel Ford

    Rachel Ford is a writer, poet, and artist (@coloring_inthedark) whose work centers on nature, healing, and connection. She writes promotional content and show coverage for Xpo Press and RMGM Promotions, supporting the gem, mineral, and fossil show community. Her poetry, art, and personal essays reflect her journey as a young adult cancer survivor and her passion for storytelling. When she’s not writing, Rachel helps organize mineral events, facilitates healing retreats, enjoys the outdoors, is a breast cancer advocate, and enjoys time in nature with her sons, mother, and dogs.

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