A digital archive showcasing the extensive collection of jewellery and adornment images shared on the former Ethnic Jewels Ning site over the years. These images have significantly enriched discussions on cultural adornment and its global dispersion.
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the amber is most likely Baltic but that doesnt help tell us where the necklace was made...
a scale would help to appreciate the dimensions.
i must confess that i know exactely where i bought them, but i wanted to have the expertise of some of the knowledgeble members and not tu lure them with the location i found this!
i bought them a time ago in Mandalay in Myanmar and i was astonished to find amber wich reminded me of baltic that far away !!
So anyone knows of how far baltic amber traveled during time?
thanx to ya all
<http://www.maggiecp.co.uk/free_organic_gems-magazine/cherry_amber.h...;
yes, at this link you will learn a lot more about "Burmite" which is amber from Myanmar.
Hillary, - You are quite right. I did not mean to imply, in speaking of "thousands of years ago", that that means just a few thousand, nor that there is no copal found outside Africa. But it is a good thing to have these matters more clearly and fully set forth, for sure. As far as AGE of amber alone is concerned, this list below is something I have just found on a website and may be useful (it is certainly interesting!). I note with some amusement that Australia is not mentioned. As it has just about all minerals, it is not surprising that a few years ago amber was found here, too, but that is apparently not yet widely known, which is unsurprising. Anyway, the list shows just how immensely old amber is - IN NATURE. When it comes to its use in WEARING ... I don't know what the supposed date for the oldest pieces is, but I'd think it must be long ago. I mentioned copal as a material because the discussion here and elsewhere often uses expressions like "African amber". Similarly, for many people "amber" (of the proper kind) means just "Baltic amber", and as the list shows, it occurs in many other places. However, in practice most proper amber one comes across is Baltic, because of the sheer quantity found in that area. Burmese amber is perhaps the most notable other variety because of its colour, although far fewer people in the west, at least, know that than they do Baltic amber. Truus does wear a lot of amber, but in any western country her necklace of slightly orange-coloured amber goes unnoticed, while many pounce on the other necklaces she wears. When we were near the Baltic sea, so to speak (visiting Russia and the Baltic states) we bought some of the very oldest amber, which is only now being dug up, and which is a very pale yellow. It is expensive, as there is not much of that material, and it is costly to mine. Baltic amber occurs in a great variety of colours, a fact exploited in the manufacture of the legendary "Amber Room". Here is the list! (Below.)
Columbia - Recent - 100-5000 y
North Carolina - Miocene - 15,000,000 n
Dominican Republic - Oligocene-Miocene - 15,000,000-40,000,000 y
Mexico - Oligocene-Miocene - 22,000,000-28,000,000 y
Baltic Sea - Eocene-Oligocene - 28,000,000-54,000,000 y
Wyoming - Paleocene - 60,000,000-65,000,000 n
Alberta, Canada - Cretaceous - 70,000,000-75,000,000 y
New Jersey - Cretaceous - 90,000,000-95,000,000 y
Burma - Cretaceous - 100,000,000 y
Lebanon - Cretaceous - 120,000,000 y
Bavaria - Triassic - 250,000,000 y
As far as the use of the word "amber" for "copal" is concerned, most of the dealers in ethnic or other jewellery whom I have dealt with over the years, in a variety of countries, have fortunately made a sharp distinction. No doubt there are people in the jewellery industry who misleadingly use the word amber for copal, but it should be realised that there is a BIG difference between the two, and that "true" amber is far more collectible. For Africa, the following, from a website called "Yakanaka", seems to me to put the position well:
"African Amber – Copal These beads are not as old as the true Amber beads, they are semi fossilised and are mainly found in Africa, namely Zanzibar Island, Morocco, Kenya, and Mali, however they still carry the mysteries and magical powers of true Amber. The Africans believe Amber to have healing powers due to its warm colours and suns rays, bright and healthy."
I add that in the "better" kind of Moroccan jewellery the amber used is generally "true amber", whereas most of the modern pieces use copal, and look much the worse as a result. There are, of course, many necklaces using recycled old true amber, and that has to be recognised as a truth even if a piece has been recently put together. It is worth paying a lot more for than copal.
In New Zealand, where Truus and I lived for 10 years, there is a material called "Kauri resin", which some of the more ignorant or dishonest dealers called "amber", but most were wise enough to recognise that it was no better than - as the name puts it - "Kauri resin" (good, but much younger than "true" amber). and if recognised as such the price of a necklace would be way below one made of "true" amber.
Note the distinction between copal and "true amber".