OPAL
Specimen opa-9
$ 20.00Dims: 1.7" x 1.5" x 1.0" (4.3 x 3.8 x 2.5 cm)
Wt: 1.67 oz. (47.4 g)
Lightning Ridge, Australia
This Opal specimen consists of a partially-ground chunk of "Lightning Ridge Knobby" Opal, a well-known variety of Black Opal that often produces very valuable stones. This particular specimen has none of the iridescence, or "fire" that makes Opal such a valuable stone. It does, however, give the average person an idea as to what exactly Black Opal is, as most people that I have spoken with do not know. It consists of a nodule of Opal, part of which has been ground to a smooth, slightly curved face. The matrix ranges in color from a moderate gray to a black coloration (the matrix color of an opal determines whether it is white or black, not the iridescence color) and is generally opaque, though there are spots on the stone that show translucence, and even some transparence. I thought that there may be some "fire" further in the nodule when I first saw it, but some rather knowledgeable opal cutters that I know said that there probably wasn't. A small amount of a hard, shale-like substance fills some of the crevices and hollows in the specimen, acting as a host rock. The smoothed face shows a small amount of "crazing", small, intersecting cracks in the stone that occur if it is exposed to warm temperatures for a long time.