Politics | California California Fights Over State Rock It contains asbestos, and lawmakers want to defrock it By John Johnson Posted Jul 17, 2010 10:12 AM CDT Copied Garry Hayes, a geology teacher at Modesto City College, displays an example of a serpentine rock in his classroom in Modesto, Calif., Wednesday, July 14, 2010. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli) You'd think California lawmakers would have enough to worry about, but then comes this: A pitched battle over the state rock. The serpentine has quietly held the title since 1965, explains the San Francisco Chronicle, but because it contains asbestos, lawmakers are considering a bill to defrock it as a symbolic gesture against the carcinogen. Scientists are fighting mad. "It's a wonderful state rock because it has got this great natural, social and scientific history in California," says an environmental historian. Pshaw, says the state senator who introduced the bill. "This isn't against serpentine. It's about asbestos. Why in a health-conscious state like California do we have a state rock that is related to asbestos?" Read These Next At least 10 dead in mass shooting in small Canadian town. No one can fly in or out of El Paso for the next week or so. The world says its final goodbye to Dawson Leery. Person reportedly detained in Nancy Guthrie disappearance. Report an error