Amber

Everyone has heard of this one, a truly beautiful gemstone – it is a fully polymerised tree resin, sometimes millions of years old. It may sometimes contain trapped insects and animal life.

We sell a wide range of Amber, including natural pieces, polished pieces, tumblestones and carvings.

Amber undergoes a polymerisation, over millions of years. ‘Young’ Amber is referred to as Copal.

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Appearance, Uses and History

Amber is a gorgeous fossilised tree resin, which can be found worldwide.

It has been used as a gemstone since antiquity.

Some pieces can be scientifically important due to high quality inclusions of insects and organic matter, which provide a very well preserved look at ancient life.

Amber specimens can contain a very wide range of inclusions – from insects and spiders to ferns, ammonites, entire lizards and even feathers from feathered dinosaurs or very early birds.

Amber often preserves with incredible detail, allowing scientists to see parasites, mites, pollen, spores and other microcosms of ancient flora and fauna.

 

Uses

Amber is pretty much exclusively used as a gemstone – it is cut and polished into jewellery – cabochons, especially. It is also carved into a range of other decorative objects.

In some parts of the Baltic, Amber and Amber markets are actually quite a large tourism draw! It is quite often used for religious purposes, too – Christian and Muslim rosaries being a key example.

It is also used for babies teething necklaces sometimes, too, although I personally do not think this is a good idea.

 

Why does everyone love Amber?

This gemstone has been known for its distinct colour and beauty since Neolithic times – beads made from the resin have been found in graves dating as far as back as 8000 BCE. There are a wide range of colours – the better known ones are honey, yellow, orange, red, and butterscotch, but it is rarely found in a blue colour or even a green.

It is a fossilised tree resin formed from millions of years of heat and pressure. The sticky resin could sometimes trap small insects and plants; these pieces are very rare, and are an especially coveted and unique material.

A polished piece with insects trapped inside is an amazing sight – while fossils are interesting, insects trapped inside the resin appear almost perfect in condition – these creatures walked the Earth thousands, if not millions of years ago, and a polished piece seems almost like a window into their past.

Amber is found in several countries worldwide, although it is sometimes known by different names.

The most common, and one of the most prized locations for this gemstone is the Baltic – it is mined in legal and illegal open pit mines in Kaliningrad Oblast, but is found throughout the Baltic Sea region. In some parts of coastal Poland, it washes up on the beaches after a storm – I have been lucky enough to see a fisherman with a net pull a fist sized piece out of the sea near Gdansk.

In the Dominican Republic and some other locations worldwide, it is found in a unique blue colour. There are several theories as to the cause of this, but it may be due to forest fires in ancient times.

 


Locales

Amber can be found in a few places around the world. The most important and famous deposits are in and around the Baltic Sea area, especially Poland and parts of Russia. It can also be found in the United Kingdom, Germany, Borneo, the Dominican Republic, the United States, Colombia, Spain, Hungary, and possibly other locations.

Most Amber sold online will be from the Baltic, the Dominican Republic, or Borneo. There is also a significant amount from Myanmar/Burma.


Mineralogy (not technically, its a mineraloid)

Chemistry
Mixture of hydrocarbons, resins, oils etc without a definitive chemical formula.
Colours and Variations

Blue, red, green, yellow, orange, brown, black

  • Baltic Amber – Amber from the Baltic Sea region – Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Estonia, Kaliningrad. Probably the most common Amber in terms of amount on the market, around 44 million years old.
  • Burmite – Amber from Burma/Myanmar. Controversial in the scientific community due to potential human rights abuses and the possibility of it funding conflict in the area. Around 99 million years old.
  • Butterscotch Amber – an opaque form of Baltic Amber with an opaque buttery colour ranging from off-white to yellow-orange.
  • Dominican Amber – Amber from the Dominican Republic – sometimes blue. This amber has many insect inclusions.
  • Indonesian Amber – Amber from Indonesia – there are various islands which produce Amber. A younger Amber, approximately 20-30 million years old. Often unclear or murky, with many inclusions of plant matter, dirt, etc but very few insects or clear inclusions.
  • Lebanese Amber – probably the oldest form of Amber, 125-130 million years old.
  • Simetite – Amber from the island of Sicily, in Italy
  • Succinite – synonym for Baltic Amber.

 

Not actually Amber:

  • Kauri Gum – a form of Copal from New Zealand – not Amber.
  • Copal – ‘young’ Amber, in an intermediate stage between a resin and amber.
Streak
White / colourless
Luster
Greasy to resinous.
Fracture
Conchoidal
Transparency
Transparent to translucent, sometimes opaque
Crystal habit
Amorphous, organic – not a crystal.
Mohs hardness
2-2.5 – very soft, not ideal for jewellery so should not be used for rings – stick to earrings and necklaces.
Specific Gravity
1.05 – 1.1
Fluorescence
Often fluorescent with a light blue tinge.
Easiest testing method

Can be burned to create a ‘nice’ pine smell, fluorescent under UV lights, extremely light and can float in salty water. Not sticky when wet with acetone, unlike Copal and most plastics.

There are many fake and simulated forms of Amber, so a more detailed list of testing methods should be read before purchasing.

Common Treatments

Amber is often treated – and there are many synthetics which can be difficult to detect. This isn’t the best place to really go into it but treatments include clarification, colour adustment, reconstitution, fake inclusions, creating ‘sun spangles’, and dyeing.

Heat treatment is probably the most common form of treatment, which is used to improve the clarity and colour of Amber.


Hazards and Warnings

Almost all rocks, minerals (and, frankly, almost all other substances on earth) can produce toxic dust when cutting, which can cause serious respiratory conditions including silicosis.

When cutting or polishing rocks, minerals, shells, etc, all work should be done wet to minimise the dust, and a suitable respirator or extraction system should be used.


Translations

While we generally only translate some of the most widely spoken languages, there are a few languages specific to areas which produce (or purchase!) a lot of Amber.

Polish: bursztyn, bursztyn baltycki – Lithuanian: gintaras – Ukrainian: бурштиновий – Estonian: merevaik – Latvian: dzintars

 

Arabic:

  • كهرمان لون الكهرمان الأصفر
  • كهرمان
  • العنبر

Hindi:

  • अंबर

Portuguese:

  • âmbar

Bengali:

  • অ্যাম্বার

Indonesian:

Punjabi:

English:

Italian:

Russian:

  • янтарь
  • янтарный цвет

French:

  • ambre

Japanese:

  • アンバー
  • コハク

Spanish:

  • ámbar

German:

  • bernstein

Korean:

  • 호박색
  • 호박

Thai:

  • อำพัน

Gujurati:

  • એમ્બર

Mandarin and Traditional Chinese:

  • 琥珀色
  • 琥珀

Urdu:


Further Reading / External Links

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amber
  • https://www.mindat.org/min-188.html
  • https://www.gemrockauctions.com/learn/technical-information-on-gemstones/is-amber-a-mineral
  • https://www.getty.edu/publications/ambers/intro/4/
  • http://earthsci.org/expeditions/amber/amber.html
  • https://www.minerals.net/gemstone/amber_gemstone.aspx
  • https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0012825221001549