Opal Pro Expert Opal Advice

February 2, 2010

More language of opals

Filed under: About Opal — Tags: , — amster88 @ 7:05 am

Gemstones need to be cut or shaped in some way before being sold to the final link in the chain - the customer on the street who wants a piece of jewelry to wear, to show off that gemstone.

Calibrated opal - opal cut to standard dimensions. These are usually ovals, but may be cut into other shapes.

A baroque is an opal cut into an irregular shape.

Cabochon is the rounded shape used in cutting most opals.

Doublets and triplets are important words to know. A doublet is a two part stone, consisting of a thin slice of precious opal glued onto a thicker stone background. Or it could be a thin slice of opal topped with a quartz cap. A triplet is, as the name implies, a three-part stone consisting of a thin slice of precious opal glued to a thicker stone background, with a piece of clear quartz glued over the top - so the opal is sandwiched in between.

If you ever see something labeled as a Gilson opal, be aware that that is a synthetic opal. Opalite is another imitation opal.

January 23, 2010

The language of opals

If you ever get a chance to talk to an opal miner, you’ll find that he…or rarely, she, uses a language you might not understand (even if you can penetrate the Australin accent!).

The language of mining:

Anyone will know what an auger is…a drill system used to open up shafts, or tunnels. But what’s a ballroom? That’s when the miners widen a particular tunnel in search of opal concentrated in its walls.

A Calwell Drill (also called CAldwell, but Calwell is correct) is a 36 inch diameter drill, used to sink shafts.

A duffer is a hole where its miners did not find any opal.

A fault is a break in the ground, usually associated with movement (mild earthquakes). Miners typically sink their shafts along these faults, which are also called slides. Surface indicators of fault lines are called lineaments.

A field is a contiguous area where opal is mined.

Kaolinite is the clay in which some opal is found. Another term for this clay is Kopi.

Mullock is the waste from an opal mine brought to the surface - the slurry that is washed from the opals. Unsightly, it usually must be “reclaimed” if the land on which it stands is to be used for anything else. This waste is also called “tailings.”

An open cut it a large pit dug to the opal level using a bulldozer.

What’s a pegging party? It’s the rush to “peg claims” stake out the land one intends to mine - in the neighborhood of a new shaft.

A pillar is a portion of ther opal level left in place to support the ceiling of the mine.

Seam opal is a relatively continuous sheet of opal found in a parent rock. Usually horizontal or parallel to the surface. A pipe is a large round tube of opal.

A “vertical seam” is one that, as the name implies, is vertical.

A self-tipper is a bucket which auomatically raises to the surface and dumps mine waste. A windlass is a hand winch used to wind rope, which lifts a bucket to the surface.

A spider is a piece of metal with a candle stuck on one end and a spike on the other, used to provide ilght for mining.

Traces are very thin lines of opal which indicate that a concentration may be near.

Lightning Ridge
A “steel band” is a line of very hard sandstone often found just above the opal level. Found at Lightning Ridge

Yowah
Yowah Nuts are small ironstone concretions with precious opal inclusions, found in Yowah, in Queensland.

Bibliography
Opal Adventures. Paul B. Downing, PhD.

January 17, 2010

Coober Pedy, Australia on the net

Filed under: About Opal, opal news — Tags: , , , — amster88 @ 7:00 am

It’s possible to find practically anything on the internet todya, including information about Coober Pedy, the opal mining town.

About.com shares information about the town.

The opal town of Coober Pedy, 535 kilometres north of Port Augusta in South Australia, has always held a strange fascination for many Australians, not that a high proportion of them have ever been there.

Coober Pedy is a place like Oodnadatta, farther north along the Oodnadatta Track, which skirts the normally waterless Lake Eyre, whose name conjures stretches of arid desert, marvelous rock and sand formations, and a natural stillness that speaks of vast distances and solitude.

http://goaustralia.about.com/cs/sasightseeing/a/cooberpedy.htm
to read the complete article.

December 16, 2009

Opals Are Beautiful, They Are Also Ancient

Filed under: About Opal, Fossilized opal — Tags: , , — amster88 @ 4:10 am

The Ridge News has an interesting article on the turtles of Lightning Ridge: Fossil discovery throws new light on evolution

Here’s the first two paragraphs of the article:

Lightning Ridge palaeontologist Dr Elizabeth Smith has identified up to seven different types of fossil turtles at Lightning Ridge.
“That’s a lot of fossil turtles for one location,” said Dr Smith, from the Australian Opal Centre, who is a PhD graduand of the University of New South Wales, Sydney.

And how do opals come into it?

“Palaeontologists have been arguing for two hundred years about the nearest relatives of turtles.

Opalised turtles also offer clues about turtle ancestry, which is one of the great unsolved problems of palaeontology.”

Read the complete article for some fascinating information on turtles, and how opalization of fossils has preserved this information for generations to come.

November 30, 2009

Photographing opal

Filed under: About Opal, opal jewelry — Tags: , , — OpalPro @ 5:34 am

If you take a look at an opal photograph on the web or in a book, it rarely does justice to the actual gemstone.

That’s because the play of color is really only visibile when the gemstone is moving.

Usually, the color is captured but the play of color is missed.

One method to capture an opal at its best is to submerge it in water. (Of course, you’d only do this with real opal, not doublets or triplets). This results in all of the opals showing simultaneously.

Take photos of dark stoneson a white background, and white or crystal opals on a black background. Increase the exposure a little bit to compensate for a lack of light.

Of course, the best way to photograph an opal is with a video camera, so that the complete play of color can be captured.

November 23, 2009

Need a reason to travel to Denio, Nevada?

Filed under: About Opal, Travel — Tags: , , — OpalPro @ 11:46 am

Australia is world-reknowned as the location for precious opal. And while most opal is found by professional miners, a lot of “noodling” takes place, in which the amateur comes on the scene - with permission of the landowner, and searches for opal (without using tools). He or she can take any opal that they discover. This costs nothing

Tourists can go to Denio, Nevada, USA to do noodling as well, although of course in the United States it isn’t called noodling. It’s called fee digging. And it does cost $50 a day (although children under the age of 12 are allowed in free). In Denio, the place to go is the Bonanza Opal Mine.

To find out the times that they are open for such fee digging, call the appropriate phone number:

May 20th - September 30th — 775-941-0111
October 1st - May 19th —-864-597-1421

Here’s a bit of history from the site:

In 1954, Glenn and Bea, and Keith and Agnes Hodson purchased the Bonanza Opal Mine from Mrs. Lockheed’s grandson and Mr. Mark Foster. One warm morning in 1973, Keith Hodson was scraping the surface of the Bonanza mine in preparation for some fee-digging customers due that day, when the blade flipped up what he originally thought was an empty beer bottle. Climbing down from the bulldozer, he was surprised to find that the “bottle” was actually an Opal weighing more than six pounds! Officially named The Bonanza Opal, it was filled with brilliant flashes of fire.

The mine has changed hands many times.

It was purchased by Lloyd Olds and Dick Leger in June of 1988 and became a corporation in July of 1992. The mine is now owned by the holders of 100 shares.

October 26, 2009

Opal Pro Expert Advice

Filed under: About Opal — Tags: , — amster88 @ 11:20 am

Welcome to Opal Pro Expert Advice.

We’re here to help you with any questions you might have about opals - how to take care of them, where to buy them, what their history is, and so on.

Also in these blog entries, we’ll be sharing information about opals…. talking about both the opals themselves and famous opal miners and famous opals.

So if you have a question, don’t hesitate to ask it, using our Comments section.

October 23, 2009

An introduction to OpalAuctions.com

Filed under: About Opal — amster88 @ 5:34 am

OpalAuctions.com is your source for acquiring fine opals, and fine opal jewelry, at reasonable prices.

The website is laid out in such a way that you can find what you’re looking for quickly and easily.

Features
–No Reserve $1 Opals
–No Reserve $5 Opals
–Opals with Videos
–Dealer Parcels
–Buy it Now Stores

Australian opals:
–Black Opals
–Boulder Opals
–Crystal Opals
–Coober Pedy Opals
–Andamooka Opals
–Koroit Opals
–Mintabie Opals
–Yowah Opals

Opal Jewelry
–Opal Rings
–Opal Pendants
–Opal Earrings
–Opal Watches
–Opal Bracelets
–Jewelry Settings

Rough Opal
–Black Opal Rough
–Boulder Opal Rough
–Coober Pedy Opal Rough
–Yowah Opal Rough

International Opals
–Brazilian Opals
–Ethiopian Opals
–Honduran Opals
–Mexican Opals
–Peruvian Opals
–Tanzania Opals

Special Categories
–Investment Opal
–Rough Opal
–Opal Beads
–Opal Triplets
–Opal Doublets
–Opal Fossils
–Opal Shells

In future editions of this blog, I’ll be discussing opals and opal jewelry in depth.

October 21, 2009

Books on Opal

Filed under: About Opal — amster88 @ 10:53 am

For many people, gemstones are beautiful items with which to adorn themselves or their lvoed ones, and their interest goes no further than that. And there’s nothing wrong with that, but one’s appreciation of these stones is enhanced so much by knowing their history, that we’ve decided to share a few book titles here for your edification.

Opals: A Fred Ward Gem Book, by Fred Ward. Illustrated.
It is only 64 pages, but its readers have praised it highly for teaching them everything there is to know about opals, from the types of opals found in Australia, Mexico, the USA, and other sites, as well as mining techniques, processing, sales, and care.

The World of Opals, by Allen W. Eckert.
Another comprehensive book about opals…only this one is over 400 pages in length. If you are serious about opals, this is the definitive resource for you.

Opal Identification and Value, by Paul B. Downing
Here’s the description from the back matter:

Learn to properly identify opals from all over the world. Many new locations have been added along with new methodology to determine the characteristics that affect value, then determine price from updated value tables. Ascertain if the opal is a natural solid, boulder, doublet, triplet, dyed or lab-created. Be able to ask definitive questions when considering an opal. Learn what to look for in properly set jewelry. Become a confident buyer, seller or appraiser by distinguishing an ordinary opal from an outstanding one.

Opal Adventures, by Paul Downing
A chatty book by Downing, recounting his adventures while visiting Australia to find opals. It will make you want to visit Australia yourself! Also illustrated with excellent photos.

July 16, 2007

KORIOT and YOWAH Opal - A Rising Star?

Filed under: About Opal — OpalPro @ 2:06 pm

Older Posts »

Powered by WordPress