Nodules and thin beds of chert occur in the upper part of the informally named Rome beds, about 8 11 km southwest of Rome, Oreg. The chert is in green to gray mudstone, about 8 m beneath a conspicuous gray and yellow zeolitic tuff. The bedded chert contains molds of saline minerals and it grades southward and marginward into nodular chert. The nodular chert is of two varieties: relatively large lobate nodules that have greenish-brown interiors and abundant saline crystal molds, and relatively small lobate nodules that have gray interiors and a surface reticulation. The latter variety is the so-called snakeskin agate prized by lapidaries. Both nodular varieties characteristically have a thin white rind. The cherts are similar, if not identical, to cherts reported from Quaternary lacustrine deposits in eastern Africa and from Pleistocene to Jurassic lacustrine deposits in Wyoming. The Rome chert probably formed from a hydrous sodium silicate precursor such as magadiite during diagenesis. Magadiite is generally a primary precipitate from a highly alkaline lake which is capable of attaining a high concentration of silica in solution.