Onyx

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Onyx is a cryptocrystalline form of quartz. The colors of its bands range from white to almost every color (save some shades, such as purple or blue.) Commonly, specimens of onyx available contain bands of colors of white, tan, and brown. Sardonyx is a variant in which the colored bands are sard (shades of red) rather than black. Pure black Onyx is common, and perhaps the most famous variety, but not as common as Onyx with banded colors.

The agate-like sardonyx (banded agate). The specimen is 2.5 cm (1 inch) wide.
The agate-like sardonyx (banded agate). The specimen is 2.5 cm (1 inch) wide.

It is usually cut as a cabochon, or into beads, and is also used for intaglios and cameos, where the bands make the image contrast with the ground. Some onyx is natural but much is produced by the staining of agate.

The name has sometimes been used, incorrectly, to label other banded lapidary materials, such as banded calcite found in Mexico, Pakistan, and other places, and often carved, polished and sold. This material is much softer than true onyx, and much more readily available. The majority of carved items sold as 'Onyx' today are this carbonate material.[1]

Technical details
Chemical composition and name SiO2 - Silicon dioxide
Hardness (Mohs scale) 7
Specific gravity 2.65 - 2.667
Refractive index (R.I.) 1.543 - 1.552 to 1.545 - 1.554
Birefringence 0.009
Optic sign Positive
Optical character Uniaxial

Contents

[edit] Historical usage

Onyx from Australia
Onyx from Australia
Onyx from Brazil
Onyx from Brazil

Onyx is originally an Assyrian word meaning ring, and so could refer to anything used for making rings. The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University was originally planned to be coated in green onyx. However, there wasn't sufficient green onyx in the world to build such a structure, so that the designers used marble. Onyx was known to the ancient Greeks and Romans.[2] Use of sardonyx appears in the art of Minoan Crete, notably from the archaeological recoveries at Knossos.[3] Onyx was used in Egypt as early as the Second Dynasty to make bowls and other pottery items.[4] In folk religion, onyx is sometimes used for targets of psychic attacks of all forms, especially those sexual in nature. [5]

Black Onyx with bands of colors.
Black Onyx with bands of colors.

[edit] Precautions

If onyx is cleaned with an ultrasonic device or cleaned with abrasive or ammonia based chemicals, discoloration of the stone may occur.

[edit] Line note references

  1. ^ Profile of onyx
  2. ^ International Colored Gemstone Association: Onyx
  3. ^ C. Michael Hogan, Knossos fieldnotes, Modern Antiquarian (2007)
  4. ^ Mary Winearls Porter, What Rome was Built with: A Description of the Stones Employed, 1907, H. Frowde, Rome, 108 pages
  5. ^ The Magickal Properties of Gemstones: Black Onyx

[edit] See also

Look up onyx in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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