Where to Find Jasper in Kansas
Kansas has 8 mapped collecting spots that report jasper, spread across 8 counties. The largest share sits in Barber County County with 1 spot. 8 of the spots are on land mapped as publicly accessible.
Map of 8 jasper collecting spots in Kansas
Best counties for jasper in Kansas
Ranked by the number of mapped jasper spots. County links open the full rockhounding page for that county.
- Barber County1 spot
- Clark County1 spot
- Cloud County1 spot
- Geary County1 spot
- Jefferson County1 spot
- Kingman County1 spot
- Marshall County1 spot
- Wilson County1 spot
Every jasper spot we track in Kansas
Sorted by county. Coordinates open in Google Maps.
| Spot | County | Minerals | Coordinates | Access |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medicine Lodge RiverBethel Road | Barber County | 37.0491, -98.4800 | Public | |
| AshlandClark County Lake Road | Clark County | 37.3347, -99.7421 | Public | |
| Concordia | Cloud County | 39.5784, -97.5687 | Public | |
| Republican RiverRiver Walk | Geary County | 39.0640, -96.8538 | Public | |
| McLouthWest Lake Street | Jefferson County | 39.1942, -95.2084 | Public | |
| Chikaskia River | Kingman County | 37.4378, -98.0528 | Public | |
| Big Blue RiverEast Avenue | Marshall County | 39.6910, -96.6546 | Public | |
| Verdigris River | Wilson County | 37.6571, -95.7763 | Public |
Before you go
Read the jasper identification guide so you know what a keeper looks like in the field: Jasper in the encyclopedia.
Jasper in Kansas FAQ
Where can you find jasper in Kansas?+
The mapped spots concentrate in Barber County County, Clark County County, and Cloud County County. Every spot on this page appears on the map above with coordinates and access notes.
How many jasper spots are mapped in Kansas?+
8 spots across 8 counties. The RockHoundR app keeps the same spots on an offline map with public land overlays, geology layers, and your saved finds.
Is it legal to collect jasper in Kansas?+
Hand collecting of common rocks and minerals in small amounts for personal use is generally allowed on BLM and U.S. Forest Service land, with limits set by the local field office. National parks, most state parks, and tribal land are closed to collecting. 8 of the 8 mapped spots here sit on land marked public. Always confirm current rules with the managing agency before you dig.
