The precious or noble opal, fire opal, common opal, hydrophane, and cachelong are different varieties of a mineral that is composed of about nine parts silica and one part water. The colors vary from chalky-white to bluish-white, from yellow to red, and from a slight play of colors to the beautiful mingling of green, blue, and red with the most remarkable kaleidoscopic effects. The opal is 5.5 to 6 in hardness, specific gravity 2 to 2.1, lustre glassy, and translucent from a slight to a very high degree. The opal is found in an amorphous state and never crystallizes; in fact from the condition of the pockets in which this mineral is found, the indications are that the substance was once a fluid. Under the blow-pipe the opal loses its translucency and cracks but does not melt. Sulphuric acid will cause it to turn black, and in a cold solution of caustic potash the opal is almost entirely soluble. The precious or noble opal is found chiefly in the mines of Czernowitza, between Kaschau and Eperies, in Hungary, and in Gracias Á Dios, a province in Honduras. In olden times, the Greek and Turkish merchants carried opals from Hungary to the Orient, and then they were shipped to Holland and sold in Europe as Oriental opals. The fire opal is of a yellowish-red color, and is found chiefly in Mexico, although it also occurs in Hungary, the Faroe Islands, Honduras, and Guatemala. The common opal is found in Ireland, Denmark, Frankfurt, Guatemala, and South Australia, and also in Hungary and Mexico. These opals are translucent without fire or reflection. The hydrophane is an opal that has lost color and brilliancy by reason of the evaporation of its water. If placed in water or alcohol, this stone becomes transparent, only to lose this quality when the water or alcohol has evaporated. The cachelong is milky-white, and nearly opaque, and is found in small masses in the river Cach, in Bucharia, and also in Iceland. Although one of the most magnificent of the gem stones, the opal for many years was under the ban of superstition. Now, this splendid stone once more commands a foremost place in the jewelers’ art, and the opal mines of Hungary and Queensland are being worked to their fullest extent to supply the demand. |