Huge blue gree opal found in Nevada

Sheldon J

Hero Member
Jul 18, 2009
897
599
Battle Creek, Mi
Detector(s) used
Mine lab, Garrett, Bounty Hunter,
From and more photos at https://www.geologyin.com/2017/06/r..._fUUoXYaPo5ROg7g4l6VfE6Sw#s2qfo7OgBPJSy1kf.99
That rock is worth a heap of $$$$$

The Roebling Opal is an extraordinary 2,585-carat piece of opal rough and is also the largest unpolished black Opal.

It came out of the tunneled portion of the Rainbow Ridge Mine in 1917 from
Virgin Valley, Nevada
. The opal was deposited from silica-rich water in voids that remained after buried tree limbs had rotted away, in some cases resulting in opal casts of the original tree parts.

Although extremely beautiful, opal from this locality is not commonly used in jewelry because it tends to craize, or crack. Opals with a vivid play-of-color and a black or other dark body color are called black opals. The Roebling Opal is a black opal with flashes of blue and green play-of-color.

The Roebling Opal was donated by John A. Roebling in 1926 and now rests with the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.

The%2BRoebling%2BOpal%2B%2B%25282%2529.jpg


Roebling%2Bopal.jpg
 

apparently found in many places, my grandfather had a ranch in Calaveras County that had "Opal Hill" with a chalk seam where we would dig out small opals with a pocket knife
 

Wow that would be awesome
 

apparently found in many places, my grandfather had a ranch in Calaveras County that had "Opal Hill" with a chalk seam where we would dig out small opals with a pocket knife

I remember Opal Hill. I went there with my Lapidary class in 1964.

Wow that was a long time ago. Thanks for the reminder.

Regards

LUE-Hawn
 

I vote banner for mr. Roebling....that thing is incredible. Maybe I saw it at the Smithsonian many years ago as a kid !
 

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