From the outside, geodes look like regular round rocks. If you crack one open though, you’ll find its walls are lined with sparkling crystals. Many geodes are small enough to fit in your hand. But in southern Spain, near the city of Pulpí, you can find a geode that’s 26 feet long!
Known as the Pulpí Geode, it’s one of the largest crystalfilled rocks ever discovered. To see it, visitors must trek 164 feet underground, through tunnels of an abandoned mine. Finally, adventurers must squeeze through its 3-foot-wide opening.
The experience is otherworldly, says Javier Garcia Guinea. He’s a geologist at the National Museum of Natural Sciences in Madrid, Spain. He is studying the geode to find out more about it, including how it formed.