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Friday, March 23, 2007

Be On The Lookout For Fake Amber

(via Wahroongai News, Volume 32, Number 3, March 1998) Grahame Brown writes:

This warning follows the recently held North Brisbane Lapidary Show at which one dealer was found to be selling materials clearly marked as amber—yet these materials were not amber. One group of the ambers for sale were manufactured from the amber imitation polyberne; and other pale yellowish ambers were obviously recent copal resin (some of which was attractively included by insect inclusions).

To assist members and students not to be taken in by this scam, the following information is supplied on these two amber imitations and their identification.

Copal Resin
Copal resin is a diaphanous brittle colorless, yellow to brownish recent plant resin that may have an age of up to several tens of thousands of years. Commercial copal resins are often given names such as Kauri gum (a misnomer), Manila, Congo or Colombian copal.

Kauri gum and manila are respectively derived from sap from the gymnosperms Agathis australis from the North Island of New Zealand and Agathis albis from the Philippines and the Indonesian archipelago. There are two major African sources of copal resin which also may be termed congo or Zanzibar resin. East African copal, which comes from Tanzania and island of Zanzibar, is derived from sap exuded from damaged trunks and branches of the leguminous (fruit-bearing) angiosperm (flowering plant) Hymenaea verrucosa; while West African copal from the Congo Republic is derived from the sap of the leguminous angiosperm Copiafera demusi. Most Colombian copal comes from ploughed fields in the Departments of Santander, Boyaca, and Bolivar—specifically near the cities and villages of Bucaramanga, Giron, Bonda, Medellin, Penablanca, Mariquita, and Valle du Jesus. Some Colombian copal has been given the tongue-twisting name of bucarimangite. Age dating of specimens of Colombian copal has yielded ages that ranged from 10 to 500 years. The source resin of Colombian copal is undoubtedly three resin producing trees that are still growing in Colombia—the Hymenaea courbaril, the H. oblongifolia, and the H. parvifolia. In these trees the exuded resin accumulates between the bark and wood, and also under the roots of the tree. Common inclusions in this very recent resin include stingless bees, millipedes, centipedes, ants, moths, beetles, cockroaches, silverfish, and termites.

Precisely how long copal resin takes to convert to amber is unknown. However, this (hardening) time is influenced by such conditions as temperature, pressure, moisture, and perhaps the presence or absence of oxygen. Poinar (1994) suggested that 2-4 million years of burial might be required to convert copal resin into amber.

Copal resin and/or kauri gum are excellent amber look-alikes so with the exception copal’s:
Slightly lower hardness (2 on Mohs scale).
Slightly lower specific gravity (varying from 1.3 to 1.09 with age).
Increased solubility in volatile hydrocarbons.
Increased volatility, with a ‘pine’-like odor being emitted when kauri and/or copal is firmly rubbed in the heel of the hand.
Increased shallow surface crazing, restricted to the outer 2mm of the resin, due to continuing evaporation of volatiles.

………these effective amber imitations have an appearance, gemological properties, sectility (chips on peeling), and pattern of inclusions virtually identical to those of amber.

Practically, the increased solubility of kauri gum/copal resin in volatile organic solvents (a potentially destructive test) may be used to effectively discriminate them from amber, as

1. Surfaces of copal resin become sticky to an applied finger following the judicious application of a drop of volatile organic solvent (e.g. ether, chloroform, acetone, or alcohol) to an inconspicuous area of the suspect resin. This is a very useful test that can be applied before you purchase specimens of ? amber; and,

2. A yellow stain will be deposited on the surface of an alcohol-moistened white cloth or tissue, when an inconspicuous surface of kauri and/or copal is wiped briskly with a moistened cloth or tissue.

Polyberne
Polyberne, a man-made composite imitation of amber consists of fragments of amber embedded in brownish polyester casting resin. Polyberne is a distinctly Polish product that displays evidence of:
- Molding.
- Entrapment of air bubbles between the external surface of the imitation and the mold into which the polyester resin was poured.
- Evidence of two components. That is fragments of amber embedded in a resin of different refractive index.

Hand lens examination, looking for evidence of embedding and molding, and perhaps a test for sectility, are all that is required to positively identify the polyberne imitation of amber.

So beware, these materials are in the marketplace. Do not be caught for want of applying a few simple observations and tests.

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