Information about mining blue amber, why it is blue, how it is found and where you can buy it.
There are many questions you might have about blue amber.
When is it blue and when isn't it?
The best way to test blue amber is placing it under an ultra-violet
lamp which intensifies the blue olor to a radiant cobalt-blue. And, we
have noticed that blue amber can be recognized by a very agreeable smell.
One theory links the color in Dominican blue amber to the occurrence of
volcanic ash or dust which was present when the resin was first pressed
out from hymenaea protera millions of years ago.
since fossilized amber was initially found on the shores much like ambergris, the linguistic confusion was complete.
In addition, translated ancient documents, particularly those from Pliny the Elder's work Naturalis historia may also pertain t
o the origin of the term amber as applied to the fossil resin (for a more complete etymology of the word amber,
Dominican Blue amber is only found in one country: here in the Caribbean, in the Dominican
Republic. If you want to buy Dominican blue amber, we as amber gemstone dealer and direct exporter are here directly
at the foot of the mountain where blue amber is found with the best contacts
into the mine to serve you the best we can. We of AmbarAzul sell Dominican
Blue Amber and amber gem stones wholesale to you directly from the place of its very origin. Amber jewelry
supplier and Dominican blue amber sterling silver jewelry and gold jewelry supplier using Dominican
amber directly from the mines, as a
manufacturer who offers custom crafted amber semi products and amber and silver jewelry,
rough amber and raw amber from the Dominican mines in the Caribbean, aamber cabochons, or amb
er cabs, mber earrings,
amber bracelets, amber rings, amber chains, amber necklaces and blue amber
necklaces as well as beads and cabochons and typical Caribbean amber jewelry. There
are several theories about the origin of the blue color in blue Dominican
amber and it is not fully understood what causes the blue color in Dominican
blue amber. We know that it is a result of blue fluorescence and no solid
blue color. The best way to test blue amber is placing it under an ultra-violet
lamp which intensifies the blue olor to a radiant cobalt-blue. And, we
have noticed that blue amber can be recognized by a very agreeable smell.
One theory links the color in Dominican blue amber to the occurrence of
volcanic ash or dust which was present when the resin was first pressed
out from hymenaea protera millions of years ago. And
- of course - besides the blue Dominican amber, we also have rough amber
in regular amber colors and all those special amber colors like green
amber and blood red amber, purple amber, as they are only found in Dominican
Amber.
The following list of Amber mines focuses on mines in the Cordillera Septentrional, a mountain range located
between the coastal city of Puerto Plata and the secret capital of the Dominican Republic, the city of Santiago.
There are two main arteries connecting the two cities, one highway taking the long way around the range,
while the shortest and scenic road cuts straight through. The scenic road, known as the Carretera Turstica,
the Tourist Road, has much history to it and it shows. The former nations dictator Trujillo built a luscious
residence alongside it with its own private coffee plantation, and had the famous revolutionists the Mirabal Sisters
brutally executed just a kilometer down the road (the incident was depicted in the movie In the Time of the Butterflies,
featuring Salma Hayek).
Blue amber comes in different shades of blue. It is difficult to put Dominican
Blue Amber into categories, since our Caribbean amber is not an industrial
product. In the lower quality (regular blue amber), the blue tone can
only really be appreciated under an ultra violet light source.
Then you will find a strong blue reflection in the yellow undertone of
Dominican blue amber (strong blue). But there is also something we call
"ultra blue amber" which is visible in almost any kind of light. This
is extremely rare, hard to get and - of course - the most expensive kind
of Dominican blue amber. And - of course - there is everything in between,
never the same, because it is the beauty of nature and not a semi-industrial
product like reconstituted and enhanced material from some other countries.
Amber from the Dominican Republic is renowned for the diversity of fossils and inclusions
it contains, the three rare "treasures", which are scorpions, lizards
and frogs but also many other "bugs" in amber, like pseudo scorpion, fly,
damsel fly, dragon fly, termite in amber. Therfore, we also offer fossil amber with bugs in amber. Our Dominican Blue Amber is
the REAL thing, natural amber just the way it comes from the mines. While
the mystery around the origin of its color has not been cleared, one thing
is sure: Dominican Blue Amber is beautiful and it is extremely rare.
Since Dominican amber is found in different mines, the quality varies. The really good stuff
comes from only three or four mines out of the dozen or so available.
The difference lies in transparency, color and size, even shape, and ultimately price.
For those uninitiated it is easy to mistaken Dominican amber for Dominican amber. Understandably.
It takes a trained eye -- better yet, two -- to separate a batch of raw pieces.
Diese Seite ist ein Informations-Portal für den Dominikanischen Blauen Bernstein.
Bernstein ist angeblich bernsteinfarben, richtig? Falsch. Die bekannten Farben sind zwar gelb, gelb, orange, honigfarben, cognacfarben und dergleichen.
Aber er kommt auch in der Natur als cremefarben, kirschfarben, rot, grün und
blau, als die seltenste aller Farben im Bernstein.
Bis zu diesem Tag glauben viele Menschen nicht an die Existenz von "BLAUEM" Bernstein.
Das wollen wir ändern.
Ist Blauer Bernstein wirklich blau?
Blauer Bernstein ist blau, jedoch nicht auf eine Weise wie Sie vielleicht denken. Die Stücke unten wurden in natürlichem Tageslicht auf unterschiedlichen
Hintergründen fotografiert.
Worin liegt der Unterschied?
Wenn natürliches Licht auf Blauen Bernstein vor einem weißen Hintergund trifft, durchdringen die Strahlen den Bernstein und werden vom Weiß reflektiert.
Das Resultat ist, dass der Bernstein einen leichten blauen Schein zeigt.
Wenn dieselben natürlichen Lichtstrahlen den Bernstein auf einem schwarzen Hintergrund treffen, werden sie von dem Bernstein selbst reflektiert.
Hydrocarbon im Blauen Bernstein verwandelt den ultravioletten Anteil in blaue Lichtpartikel, wodurch der berühmte Schein des blauen Bernstein entsteht.
Dieser Effekt tritt nur bei Dominikanischem Bernstein der Blauen Art auf. Anderer Bernstein (z.B. Baltischer) zeigt dieses Phänomen nicht
.
Mehr Information :
Andere Links :
ince Dominican amber is found in different mines, the quality varies. The really good stuff c
omes from only three or four mines out of the dozen or so available.
The difference lies in transparency, color and size, even shape, and ultimately price.
For those uninitiated it is easy to mistaken Dominican amber for Dominican amber. Understandably.
Blue amber is only found in one country: here in the Caribbean, in the Dominican
Republic. If you want to buy Dominican blue amber, we as amber gemstone dealer and direct exporter are here directly
at the foot of the mountain where blue amber is found with the best contacts
into the mine to serve you the best we can. We of AmbarAzul sell Dominican
Blue Amber and amber gem stones wholesale to you directly from the place of its very origin. Amber jewelry
supplier and Dominican blue amber sterling silver jewelry and gold jewelry supplier using Dominican
amber directly from the mines, as a
manufacturer who offers custom crafted amber semi products and amber and silver jewelry,
rough amber and raw amber from the Dominican mines in the Caribbean, aamber cabochons, or amb
er cabs, mber earrings,
amber bracelets, amber rings, amber chains, amber necklaces and blue amber
necklaces as well as beads and cabochons and typical Caribbean amber jewelry. There
are several theories about the origin of the blue color in blue Dominican
amber and it is not fully understood what causes the blue color in Dominican
blue amber. We know that it is a result of blue fluorescence and no solid
blue color. The best way to test blue amber is placing it under an ultra-violet
lamp which intensifies the blue olor to a radiant cobalt-blue. And, we
have noticed that blue amber can be recognized by a very agreeable smell.
One theory links the color in Dominican blue amber to the occurrence of
volcanic ash or dust which was present when the resin was first pressed
out from hymenaea protera millions of years ago. And
- of course - besides the blue Dominican amber, we also have rough amber
in regular amber colors and all those special amber colors like green
amber and blood red amber, purple amber, as they are only found in Dominican
Amber.
Blue amber comes in different shades of blue. It is difficult to put Dominican
Blue Amber into categories, since our Caribbean amber is not an industrial
product. In the lower quality (regular blue amber), the blue tone can
only really be appreciated under an ultra violet light source.
Then you will find a strong blue reflection in the yellow undertone of
Dominican blue amber (strong blue). But there is also something we call
"ultra blue amber" which is visible in almost any kind of light. This
is extremely rare, hard to get and - of course - the most expensive kind
of Dominican blue amber. And - of course - there is everything in between,
never the same, because it is the beauty of nature and not a semi-industrial
product like reconstituted and enhanced material from some other countries.
Amber from the Dominican Republic is renowned for the diversity of fossils and inclusions
it contains, the three rare "treasures", which are scorpions, lizards
and frogs but also many other "bugs" in amber, like pseudo scorpion, fly,
damsel fly, dragon fly, termite in amber.
by Alec Corday
Santiago, November 2005
Bugs, feathers, plants and lizards. Plenty of them doing time in amber.
Obviously they can be fit into a respective evolutionary pattern, which then should correlate to a certain time period in the long history of earthly evolution.
Except they dont.
Trying to fit amber inclusions into the evolutionary pattern has become a game of hammering the peg into the preconceived hole: sometimes they fit just perfectly,
sometimes they don't, sometimes we have to cheat. And sometimes the peg is square and the hole is round and you have to hit hard to make it fit.
But how old is Dominican amber, really? Can we take the geological numbers
for granite? Where do these preposterous numbers even come from?