I've got some beautiful Pudding Stones (description below) I've put in my tank but I'm not sure if I should have! I've done some searches here and elsewhere but can't find a definitive answer. Any thoughts? I thought about coating them with something to maybe make them tank-safe.
Drummond Island, Michigan: Millions of years of geologic process result in puddingstone, a metaconglomorate made up of brightly colored jasper pebbles in a quartzite matrix. Unique to the bedrock of the western end of the North Channel of Lake Huron, it was moved and dropped by glaciers across the Michigan landscape, especially on Drummond Island, and as far south as Ohio and Kentucky. A product of chemical sedimentation and volcanic activity, the jasper in puddingstone is a siliceous rock, colored by metal oxides such as iron and magnetite resulting in the brilliant reds and blacks typical of Drummond Island puddingstone. It was named by 19th century English settlers who were reminded of the fruit-filled puddings of their native land.
Drummond Island, Michigan: Millions of years of geologic process result in puddingstone, a metaconglomorate made up of brightly colored jasper pebbles in a quartzite matrix. Unique to the bedrock of the western end of the North Channel of Lake Huron, it was moved and dropped by glaciers across the Michigan landscape, especially on Drummond Island, and as far south as Ohio and Kentucky. A product of chemical sedimentation and volcanic activity, the jasper in puddingstone is a siliceous rock, colored by metal oxides such as iron and magnetite resulting in the brilliant reds and blacks typical of Drummond Island puddingstone. It was named by 19th century English settlers who were reminded of the fruit-filled puddings of their native land.