19.40 CTS RARE PAIR PEANUT WOOD FOSSIL POLISHED STONE [MGW5137]
- UGS
- Dimensions (mm)
- 27.000 x 13.000 x 3.000mm
- Poids (cts)
- 19.400
- Treatment
- No Treatment
- Couleurs
-
PAIR PEANUT WOOD FOSSIL STONE
The first people to find this material thought it looked like peanuts so the name stuck to it. Back to the Cretaceous seafloor where the waterlogged wood that has been heavily drilled by prehistoric shipworms is resting. Billions of tiny radiolarians (tiny plankton with siliceous shells) are living in the water above the wood. A river mouth is a great place for radiolarians to live because the river delivers a continuous supply of nutrients to the sea. When the radiolarians die, their tiny silicious shells sink to the bottom and accumulate as a white sediment known as radiolarian ooze. Layer after layer of radiolarian ooze accumulated over the wood, entered the bore holes, and some of it dissolved to form a super-saturated silica solution. This dissolved silica precipitated in the cavities of the wood and replaced the woody tissues, converting the waterlogged wood into a fossil. Today, if a piece of the wood is broken, the petrified wood is a brown-to-black color. Contrasting with the wood is the white radiolarian ooze that filled the boreholes. Since the boreholes are filled, they appear on the broken surface of the wood as white oval-shaped markings about the size and shape of a peanut. That is how the peanut wood obtained its distinctive appearance and its name. The sediments that contained the peanut wood lithified into sedimentary rocks that are now known as the “Windalia Radiolarite.” The Windalia was eventually uplifted as part of Western Australia’s Kennedy Ranges, which are now above sea level. A few lapidaries found the peanut wood, tried cutting it and discovered that it is a gem material that can be used to make very colorful, interesting, and brightly polished cabochons.
- UGS
- Dimensions (mm)
- 27.000 x 13.000 x 3.000 mm
- Poids (cts)
- 19.400
- Treatment
- No Treatment
- Couleurs
-
PAIR PEANUT WOOD FOSSIL STONE
The first people to find this material thought it looked like peanuts so the name stuck to it. Back to the Cretaceous seafloor where the waterlogged wood that has been heavily drilled by prehistoric shipworms is resting. Billions of tiny radiolarians (tiny plankton with siliceous shells) are living in the water above the wood. A river mouth is a great place for radiolarians to live because the river delivers a continuous supply of nutrients to the sea. When the radiolarians die, their tiny silicious shells sink to the bottom and accumulate as a white sediment known as radiolarian ooze. Layer after layer of radiolarian ooze accumulated over the wood, entered the bore holes, and some of it dissolved to form a super-saturated silica solution. This dissolved silica precipitated in the cavities of the wood and replaced the woody tissues, converting the waterlogged wood into a fossil. Today, if a piece of the wood is broken, the petrified wood is a brown-to-black color. Contrasting with the wood is the white radiolarian ooze that filled the boreholes. Since the boreholes are filled, they appear on the broken surface of the wood as white oval-shaped markings about the size and shape of a peanut. That is how the peanut wood obtained its distinctive appearance and its name. The sediments that contained the peanut wood lithified into sedimentary rocks that are now known as the “Windalia Radiolarite.” The Windalia was eventually uplifted as part of Western Australia’s Kennedy Ranges, which are now above sea level. A few lapidaries found the peanut wood, tried cutting it and discovered that it is a gem material that can be used to make very colorful, interesting, and brightly polished cabochons.
Fournisseur d'expédition | Expédition vers Australia | Expédition dans le reste du monde |
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FedEx | $12.00 / 3 | $39.00 / 10 |
Australia
FedEx bénéficie d'une remise de $12.00 sur les commandes contenant 2 ou plus d'articles
Reste du monde
FedEx bénéficie d'une remise de $39.00 sur les commandes contenant 2 ou plus d'articles
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Registered Shipping | $9.00 / 7 | $16.00 / 21 |
Australia
Registered Shipping bénéficie d'une remise de $9.00 sur les commandes contenant 2 ou plus d'articles
Reste du monde
Registered Shipping bénéficie d'une remise de $16.00 sur les commandes contenant 2 ou plus d'articles
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Positif
Good stone great service
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Positif
Great thank very much, lovely pearls.
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Positif
Nice piece of rough. thankyou
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Positif
Nice stone. Thankyou
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Positif
Have received the rough. Nice colour. Thankyou