Bill James (Australia) writes:
It is a similar process to that which causes tree trunks of long ago to be changed to stone in cheerful yellows, browns and grays which now turn up as pebbles that make attractive costume jewelry. In Queensland, opal is found inside small boulders of dark sandstone known to miners as Yowah nuts. Some of these contain kernels of precious opal, rather like the thunder eggs of agate. In these many varied ways, over immense periods of time, Australia’s jewel box of gems has been built up. Already many of these deposits have been discovered, but others await discovery, and it may well be by some amateur gem seeker.
These stones are all products of our earths crust, except one—the tektite, a word that means ‘melted rock’. Tektites are thought to have come from space, either as volcanic glass from the surface of the moon or in the tail of a comet. Tektites are translucent, greenish to brownish objects, averaging an ounce or more in weight and occurring in a number of rounded shapes. They are estimated to be less than 10 millions years old. They occur in at least six other parts of the world as well Australia and North Western Tasmania. Millions are scattered south of an irregular line from the Kimberleys to Kyogle in New South Wales.
In some areas they are scattered thickly. Around Charlotte Waters in the Northern Territory, an explorer collected 8000. Over the course of time, like other gemstones, tektites found their way into alluvial deposits. Early New South Wales gold miners called them ‘button stones’ and believed they indicated rich yields of gold. Some even took them to California as lucky charms. As substances which have reached us from the remoteness of space, tektites have a peculiar appeal to the imagination. They make up readily into costume jewelry that is certain to create interest.
Discover P.J. Joseph's blog, your guide to colored gemstones, diamonds, watches, jewelry, art, design, luxury hotels, food, travel, and more. Based in South Asia, P.J. is a gemstone analyst, writer, and responsible foodie featured on Al Jazeera, BBC, CNN, and CNBC. Disclosure: All images are digitally created for educational and illustrative purposes. Portions of the blog were human-written and refined with AI to support educational goals.
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Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Watership Down
Greatest Opening Film Lines (Watership Down - 1978):
Long ago, the great Frith made the world. He made all the stars, and the Earth lived among the stars. He made all the animals and birds, and at first, he made them all the same. Now, among the animals in these days was El-Ahrairah, the prince of rabbits. He had many friends, and they all ate grass together. But after a time, the rabbits wandered everywhere, multiplying and eating as they went. Then Frith said to El-Ahrairah, 'Prince Rabbit, if you cannot control your people, I shall find ways to control them.'
Long ago, the great Frith made the world. He made all the stars, and the Earth lived among the stars. He made all the animals and birds, and at first, he made them all the same. Now, among the animals in these days was El-Ahrairah, the prince of rabbits. He had many friends, and they all ate grass together. But after a time, the rabbits wandered everywhere, multiplying and eating as they went. Then Frith said to El-Ahrairah, 'Prince Rabbit, if you cannot control your people, I shall find ways to control them.'
Bob Dylan
Being noticed can be a burden. Jesus got himself crucified because he got himself noticed. So I disappear a lot.
I really liked it.
I really liked it.
The Top Ten: 2005
Milton Esterow writes about art market perception (s) + the way collectors spend their money to buy the right thing + other viewpoints @ http://artnews.com/issues/article.asp?art_id=1868
The ARTnews 200
http://artnews.com/issues/article.asp?art_id=1866
The ARTnews 200
http://artnews.com/issues/article.asp?art_id=1866
The Call Of The Fens
Stuart Jeffries takes part in a unique art project and shares his experience (s) @ http://arts.guardian.co.uk/art/visualart/story/0,,2158660,00.html
Where To Look
Bill James (Australia) writes:
Wind, rain frost and chemical reaction with gases in the atmosphere, smash and decompose the hardest rocks. Running water is the world’s most energetic miner. It carries vast loads of material to sea with every rainfall. Rivers and streams carve away the faces of mountains, pounding rocks into pebbles and sand. Where the stream rushes swiftly, the bedrock is scoured; where it loiters, the gravels carried in the water are left in what are called alluvial deposits.
These deposits contain the heavy insoluble materials washed from the rocks, including gold and gemstones. Rain falling over a mountain range sweeps into the river systems of the area the debris of rocks already decomposed by exposure to air and the alternate effects of frost and sunshine. In this way rivers concentrate deposits of both gold and gems that are far richer than those contained in the original rocks.
But many things can happen to a river in a few thousand years. Most likely it will change its course several times, each time leaving gem gravels high and dry and creating fresh deposits in new places. Rivers have been gathering gold and gems from the rocks of Australia not for thousands of years but thousands of million of years. Time and again the landscape has changed. Where once a river flowed from east to west, it is diverted to flow from north to south. What was once a streambed becomes a mountain-top; sea invades the river valley, smashing the rocks with its waves. Or perhaps a huge glacier, most ruthless of nature’s jackhammers, grinds across the land, carving mountains to new shapes, leveling valleys, carting heaps of rock and gravel many miles to faraway places. Glaciers left their mark on Tasmania and New South Wales and scattered a thin trail of diamonds as they rasped across the highlands of north-eastern Victoria. In one place ice blocked the rivers; in another, fire. Lava from a volcano flowed over the diamond field of Copetown in New England some 40 million years ago burying a riverbed under up to 130 ft. of basalt.
Buried alluvial deposits are known as deep leads and some people believe there is a fortune in diamonds in the deep lead at Copeton, in the New England district of New South Wales, but the cost of finding out has made it too great a gamble for anyone to venture as yet. Copeton is unique in being the only place in Australia where a diamond has been found in its original volcanic vent. This was a dolerite (basalt) dyke at Oakey Creek. The vast changes that have taken place on the earth’s surface have given rise to two other types of rocks beside those of an igneous nature. Sedimentary rocks are derived from the weathered waste of older rocks, like sandstone or conglomerate, or precipitated from solution, as gypsum or limestone. Gemstones are sometimes found among the pebbles and rock fragments making up conglomerates.
Richer in ores than the water-formed sediments are the metamorphic rocks. These are created by the transformation of igneous and sedimentary rocks under extremes of heat and pressure. Under these circumstances granite become gneiss and limestone changes to marble. This is known as regional or dynamic metamorphism and may occur over large areas. Metamorphic rocks are a product of the tremendous convulsions of the earth’s surface that I have already mentioned. When magma forces its way into and through existing rocks, changes occur that are described as local or contact metamorphism.
In this, the superheated, concentrated solutions of magmatic water, with its chemical mineralisers, play an important part. As a result, sapphires and rubies, garnets and spinels among other gems occur in contact metamorphic deposits.
In some metamorphic rocks, crystals of mica, garnet, chlorite and other minerals have been lined up so that the rock will break easily along parallel surfaces. Such rocks are called schists. Turquoise is found in veins through some schists and slate —metamorphosed shale from Rockhampton to Brisbane in Queensland, and also at localities in New South Wales and Victoria. Among other gemstones produced from silica solutions are chalcedony, agate and Australia’s pride, the opal.
Opal comes in two forms, common and precious; with the common opal, known to the miners as potch, often acting as a signpost to the better stuff. Potch can be colorless, as hyalite, amber, milky, blue-gray or black, but it lacks iridescence and fire. Precious opal glows in red, blues, and greens, colors that flash and move as the stone is turned in the light, rainbow hues created by the breakdown of light through layers in the gem having slightly different refractive properties.
In Australia precious opal was first discovered as nodules and veins in cracks and cavities of basaltic lava and the quartz-rich igneous rocks called andesite or trachyte. But this mountain opal was disappointingly subject to cracking and crazing on exposure to dry air. The real opal country is the 50000 square miles of sandstone laid under the sea that spread over much of central Australia 120 million years ago. This dry and bare expanse of modest hills and sandstone ridges takes in 52 known mining localities in Queensland as well as White Cliffs and Lightning Ridge in New South Wales.
Mines at Andamooka and Coober Pedy are in sandstone and shale of a similar period and it is likely that important deposits of opal await discovery in the so-called desert sandstones of South Australia. The silica solutions which filled crevices and replaced other substances, such as wood and bone, in the rock also cemented the sandstone into what is called duricrust. As angel stone, shin-cracker and steelband, this hard rock is usually found in layers above opal.
A number of fossils have been turned to opals, including plants, shells and the bones of dinosaurs. Just before the First World War an almost perfect skeleton of a small dinosaur came to light at White Cliffs. Part of a crocodile’s jaw and teeth in blue black opal was dug up at Lightning Ridge, where the celebrated ‘nobbies’ are also of fossil origin. But this is not to say that the opal dates back to dinosaurs. The skeleton of a cat, buried in a miner’s hat, was found to have turned to pale pink opal. Gateposts buried 20 years were found to be opalised at the foot.
Where To Look: (continued)
Wind, rain frost and chemical reaction with gases in the atmosphere, smash and decompose the hardest rocks. Running water is the world’s most energetic miner. It carries vast loads of material to sea with every rainfall. Rivers and streams carve away the faces of mountains, pounding rocks into pebbles and sand. Where the stream rushes swiftly, the bedrock is scoured; where it loiters, the gravels carried in the water are left in what are called alluvial deposits.
These deposits contain the heavy insoluble materials washed from the rocks, including gold and gemstones. Rain falling over a mountain range sweeps into the river systems of the area the debris of rocks already decomposed by exposure to air and the alternate effects of frost and sunshine. In this way rivers concentrate deposits of both gold and gems that are far richer than those contained in the original rocks.
But many things can happen to a river in a few thousand years. Most likely it will change its course several times, each time leaving gem gravels high and dry and creating fresh deposits in new places. Rivers have been gathering gold and gems from the rocks of Australia not for thousands of years but thousands of million of years. Time and again the landscape has changed. Where once a river flowed from east to west, it is diverted to flow from north to south. What was once a streambed becomes a mountain-top; sea invades the river valley, smashing the rocks with its waves. Or perhaps a huge glacier, most ruthless of nature’s jackhammers, grinds across the land, carving mountains to new shapes, leveling valleys, carting heaps of rock and gravel many miles to faraway places. Glaciers left their mark on Tasmania and New South Wales and scattered a thin trail of diamonds as they rasped across the highlands of north-eastern Victoria. In one place ice blocked the rivers; in another, fire. Lava from a volcano flowed over the diamond field of Copetown in New England some 40 million years ago burying a riverbed under up to 130 ft. of basalt.
Buried alluvial deposits are known as deep leads and some people believe there is a fortune in diamonds in the deep lead at Copeton, in the New England district of New South Wales, but the cost of finding out has made it too great a gamble for anyone to venture as yet. Copeton is unique in being the only place in Australia where a diamond has been found in its original volcanic vent. This was a dolerite (basalt) dyke at Oakey Creek. The vast changes that have taken place on the earth’s surface have given rise to two other types of rocks beside those of an igneous nature. Sedimentary rocks are derived from the weathered waste of older rocks, like sandstone or conglomerate, or precipitated from solution, as gypsum or limestone. Gemstones are sometimes found among the pebbles and rock fragments making up conglomerates.
Richer in ores than the water-formed sediments are the metamorphic rocks. These are created by the transformation of igneous and sedimentary rocks under extremes of heat and pressure. Under these circumstances granite become gneiss and limestone changes to marble. This is known as regional or dynamic metamorphism and may occur over large areas. Metamorphic rocks are a product of the tremendous convulsions of the earth’s surface that I have already mentioned. When magma forces its way into and through existing rocks, changes occur that are described as local or contact metamorphism.
In this, the superheated, concentrated solutions of magmatic water, with its chemical mineralisers, play an important part. As a result, sapphires and rubies, garnets and spinels among other gems occur in contact metamorphic deposits.
In some metamorphic rocks, crystals of mica, garnet, chlorite and other minerals have been lined up so that the rock will break easily along parallel surfaces. Such rocks are called schists. Turquoise is found in veins through some schists and slate —metamorphosed shale from Rockhampton to Brisbane in Queensland, and also at localities in New South Wales and Victoria. Among other gemstones produced from silica solutions are chalcedony, agate and Australia’s pride, the opal.
Opal comes in two forms, common and precious; with the common opal, known to the miners as potch, often acting as a signpost to the better stuff. Potch can be colorless, as hyalite, amber, milky, blue-gray or black, but it lacks iridescence and fire. Precious opal glows in red, blues, and greens, colors that flash and move as the stone is turned in the light, rainbow hues created by the breakdown of light through layers in the gem having slightly different refractive properties.
In Australia precious opal was first discovered as nodules and veins in cracks and cavities of basaltic lava and the quartz-rich igneous rocks called andesite or trachyte. But this mountain opal was disappointingly subject to cracking and crazing on exposure to dry air. The real opal country is the 50000 square miles of sandstone laid under the sea that spread over much of central Australia 120 million years ago. This dry and bare expanse of modest hills and sandstone ridges takes in 52 known mining localities in Queensland as well as White Cliffs and Lightning Ridge in New South Wales.
Mines at Andamooka and Coober Pedy are in sandstone and shale of a similar period and it is likely that important deposits of opal await discovery in the so-called desert sandstones of South Australia. The silica solutions which filled crevices and replaced other substances, such as wood and bone, in the rock also cemented the sandstone into what is called duricrust. As angel stone, shin-cracker and steelband, this hard rock is usually found in layers above opal.
A number of fossils have been turned to opals, including plants, shells and the bones of dinosaurs. Just before the First World War an almost perfect skeleton of a small dinosaur came to light at White Cliffs. Part of a crocodile’s jaw and teeth in blue black opal was dug up at Lightning Ridge, where the celebrated ‘nobbies’ are also of fossil origin. But this is not to say that the opal dates back to dinosaurs. The skeleton of a cat, buried in a miner’s hat, was found to have turned to pale pink opal. Gateposts buried 20 years were found to be opalised at the foot.
Where To Look: (continued)
Monday, September 10, 2007
Jose Carreras
I think the second to be true, because the soul is the center and the source of all these emotions, it's the start of singing, it's inside us; the voice is the instrument, but it's the brain that gives the orders for our actions, so I strongly believe that singing starts in the soul.
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