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Fordite, also known as Detroit agate, Motor City agate, [1] paint rock, or paint slag, [2] is a lapidarist term for polished pieces of finely layered paint masses from automobile factories. The masses consist of automotive paint which has hardened sufficiently to be cut and polished.
Dendritic agates have dark-colored, fern-like patterns on the surface or the spaces between bands. [7] [6]: 25 They are composed of manganese or iron oxides. Moss agates exhibit a moss-like pattern and are usually green or brown in color. They form when dendritic structures on the surface of an agate are pushed inward with the silica gel during ...
Agate. Agate is a fibrous, banded variety of chalcedony that occurs in a variety of colors and patterns. [9] Iris agate shows exceptional iridescence when light (especially pinpointed light) is shone through the stone. Landscape agate is chalcedony with a number of different mineral impurities making the stone resemble landscapes. [10]
Lake Superior agate is a type of agate found primarily near the shores of Lake Superior. It can also be found in interior regions of the U.S. states of Minnesota , Michigan , Wisconsin , Iowa , Nebraska , Kansas , and Missouri , and in the Canadian province of Ontario .
A characteristic feature of thundereggs is that (like other agates) the individual beds they come from can vary in appearance, though they can maintain a certain specific identity within them. Thunderegg is not synonymous with either geode or agate. A geode is a simple term for a rock with a hollow in it, often with crystal formation/growth.
The Fairburn Agate is a type of gemstone found in the agate beds of Southwestern South Dakota and Northwestern Nebraska. It is also the state gemstone of South Dakota. [ 1 ] Fairburns are characterized from other types of agate by their colors and the shape of the bands.
Moss agate pebble, 1 inch (25 mm) long Montana moss agate. Moss agate is a semi-precious gemstone formed from silicon dioxide.It is a form of chalcedony which includes minerals of a green color embedded in the stone, forming filaments and other patterns suggestive of moss. [1]
The name "Myrickite" is a lapidary term like "Montana Agate" or "Thunder Egg", not a mineral name. In addition, the percentage of mercury (0.01%) in this material is enough to give Myrickite its beautiful coloring. Myrickite is named after Francis Marion "Shady" Myrick who discovered it while prospecting in California's Death Valley in 1911. [2]