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46mm Dyed Pink Agate Sphere Fuchsia Crystal Decor Ball Polished Chalcedony Mineral Stone - India + Plastic Stand
DESCRIPTION
All our minerals and crystals are carefully measured with digital measuring instruments that provide the high accuracy of numbers/values!
(The above information is provided solely for informational purpose. Kindly note that all stones are offered for decorative purposes only. Please, handle your stones with great care, do not grind or crumble them, do not dip or add them into your food or drink, do not use any parts of them in any elixirs, potions, lotions etc. Always make sure you wash your hands before and after working with your crystals.)
- You will receive exactly this Dyed Pink Agate Sphere - 46mm / 1 13/16 Inches Diameter; 140g / 4.9 oz (see photo, stand included)!
- Agate is the banded form of the mineral Chalcedony, which is a microcrystalline variety of Quartz. Agate is the most varied and popular type of Chalcedony, having many varieties on its own. Although the pattern on every Agate is unique, the locality of an Agate will provide resemblances in banding style and color, thus lending many Agates with a geographic prefix.
- While the Agate is natural mined material and the banding and patterns are all natural, the material is dyed to create the pink coloration. The coloration seeps into the banded layers of Agate in different amounts depending on the purity of the crystal in that layer, resulting in the magnificent banded color layers.
- Chemical Formula: SiO2 Silicon dioxide; Hardness: 6.5 to 7 on the Mohs scale; Color: Multicolored in banded formation. Colors include white, blue, red, green, yellow, orange, brown, pink, purple, gray, and black. Some rarer forms of Agate are iridescent.
- Agate has irregular, sometimes circular bands of color and often replaces fossil wood. Many fossils are agatized material where the original organic substance has been replaced by agate while retaining the original structure. Agates are identical in chemical structure to jasper, flint, chert, bloodstone, and tiger-eye, and are often found in association with opal.