Skin Creek Occurrence — azurite rockhounding site near Creek Occurrence Is A Mineral Prospect In Boundary, ID
AzuriteIDFee varies

Skin Creek Occurrence

Rockhounding site in Creek Occurrence Is A Mineral Prospect In Boundary, Idaho · Other

Skin Creek Occurrence is a azurite rockhounding site near Creek Occurrence Is A Mineral Prospect In Boundary, ID. Fee varies. Best season: Spring through fall.

Typical season: Spring through fall

Key facts

Structured details for trip planning — verify access and fees with the land manager before you visit.

Specimen type
Azurite
Primary specimens
Azurite, Chrysocolla, Copper, Galena, Malachite, Silver, Sphalerite
Fee status
Fee varies
Nearest town
Creek Occurrence Is A Mineral Prospect In Boundary
State
Idaho
Coordinates
48.77767, -116.15666
Best season
Spring through fall; confirm seasonal road access
Access difficulty
Moderate; remote roads possible
Camping
Dispersed camping may be available nearby; verify land rules
Activities
Rock and mineral collecting
Facilities
Creek Occurrence is a mineral prospect in Boundary area services
Last updated
July 5, 2026

What to pack for Skin Creek Occurrence

Gear we compare side by side for other trips like this one — tools, safety, sun, and the hike in.

All gear categories →

Disclosure: Gear links may earn a commission as an Amazon Associate — at no extra cost to you. Learn more.

The experience

  • Best time to visitSpring through fall; confirm seasonal road access
  • AccessModerate; remote roads possible
  • FacilitiesCreek Occurrence is a mineral prospect in Boundary area services
  • Camping nearbyDispersed camping may be available nearby; verify land rules

Map & location

Open in MapsGet directions48.77767, -116.15666

Sources & updates

Last reviewed

Spotted outdated access, fees, or safety info? Send a correction with the page URL — we review every submission.

Planning a trip to Skin Creek Occurrence?

Browse more rockhounding sites in Idaho or explore the full directory.

Safety notice: Field and weather conditions change with weather, season, and field conditions. Verify current conditions with local land managers before you go. Collect at your own risk — there are rarely rangers or land managers at these sites.