OOC:
Herboloby is no help so nly 2d6
You work together and are able to find a few samples of semiprecious stone that could be pollished and possibly shaped to figurines or the like and sold for a few copper or silver. More importanly you are able to trace them to a section of the hill that collapsed into a rock slide some time in the past The rock slide looks to be where the stream picked up to minerals and you turn from it and head up the mountain.
The lower mountains are moderatly wooded but the higher you go the sparser the treee cover becomes. Squirls, birds, and the odd lizard are the only signs os activity in the area though you dobt the area is free of larger beast that simply stay out of sight. The coll fresh air is noticably thinner than down in the lowlands of the mannor and you are quickly breathing hard to make up for the difference.
The hike up the mountain following the stream, then rock slide, takes you several hours and as the sun gets close to the horizon you keep an eye out for a decent camp sight. You find a small copse of treed in a highland vale and make you way into it and find the best shelter possible as you make a small file for a nice warm meal before settling down for the night.
Elyse has grown excited and disheartened at the same time with the increased signs of a good stone vein but the remoteness would make creating a large opperation hard in this location. However Blornvid points ot that it should not be too hard to cinvince a dwarven family or small clan to set up operations here as they tend to not mind the lack of a thick social callender and are often only all to glade to have a mountain to themselves. You make arrangement for a watch as you chat and settle down for the night.
Waking in the morning you continue tracking the mineral traces and around mid day come to a ragged cliff face with large heaps of rough stone tiummbles around it that looks to be the souce of the deposits. As you look around Gutelos spots some interesting marking and informs the others that the stone has bee worked. Though not a common practice he has heard of a process used in high mountains where entire sections of cliff are sheered off for mining. This allows large ammounts of rock to be easily broken down to smaller chunks for processing. The clif is mostly granite so perhaps it was used to quarry that for use elsewhere? By his best guess the stone has been cut here repeatedly and finds some marks that don't look to be too old . . .
Roll to ain more information and/or let me know any path of investigation