Dictionary Definition
amber adj : a medium to dark brownish yellow
color [syn: brownish-yellow,
yellow-brown]
Noun
1 a deep yellow color; "an amber light
illuminated the room"; "he admired the gold of her hair" [syn:
gold]
2 a hard yellowish to brownish translucent fossil
resin; used for jewelry
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From Arabic (‘anbar) ‘ambergris’ (now ‘amber’). Ambergris, of animal origin, somehow became confused with the fossil resin, of vegetable origin, so the French language differentiated them as ambre gris, grey amber, and ambre jaune, yellow amber. English adopted this differentiation in the respective forms ambergris and amber.Pronunciation
- /ˈæmbə(r)/, /"
Extensive Definition
Amber is the name for fossil resin or tree sap that is
appreciated for its colour and beauty. It is used for the
manufacture of ornamental objects and jewellery. Although not
mineralized, it
is sometimes considered a gemstone. Most of the world's
amber is in the range of 30–90 million years old. Semi-fossilized
resin or sub-fossil amber is called copal. It can hold insects or even
small mammals. It can also be found in a few different colours; the
usual orangey yellow that is associated with amber, green amber and
even blue which is highly sought after.
Origin of the term
The English word amber stems from the old Arabic word anbargris or ambergris and refers to an oily, perfumed substance secreted by the sperm whale. Middle English ambre > Old French ambre > Medieval Latin ambra (or ambar). It floats on water and is washed up on the beaches. Due to a confusion of terms (see: Abu Zaid al Hassan from Siraf & Sulaiman the Merchant (851), Silsilat-al-Tawarikh (travels in Asia), it became to be the name for fossil resin or tree sap, which is also found on beaches.The presence of insects in amber was noticed by
the Pliny the
Elder in his Naturalis
Historia and led him to the (correct) theory that at some
point, amber had to be in a liquid state to cover the bodies of
insects. Hence he gave it the expressive name of suceinum or
gum-stone, a name that is still in use today to describe succinic
acid as well as succinite, a term given to a particular type of
amber by James
Dwight Dana (see below under Baltic Amber).
The Greek name for amber was ηλεκτρον (Electron)
and was connected to the Sun God, one of whose titles was Elector
or the Awakener. It is discussed by Theophrastus,
possibly the first ever mention of the material, and in the 4th
century BC. The modern term electron was coined in 1891 by
the Irish physicist George
Stoney, using the Greek word for amber (and which was then
translated as electrum) because of its electrostatic properties and
whilst analyzing elementary charge for the first time. The ending
-on, common for all subatomic particles, was used in analogy to the
word ion.
Heating amber will soften it and eventually it
will burn, which is why in Germanic
languages the word for amber is a literal translation of
burn-Stone (In German it is Bernstein, in Dutch it is barnsteen
etc.). Heated below 200°C, amber suffers decomposition, yielding an
"oil of amber", and leaving a black residue which is known as
"amber colophony", or "amber pitch"; when dissolved in oil of
turpentine or in
linseed
oil this forms "amber varnish" or "amber lac".
Chemistry of amber
Amber is heterogeneous in composition, but consists of several resinous bodies more or less soluble in alcohol, ether and chloroform, associated with an insoluble bituminous substance. Amber is a macromolecule by free radical polymerization of several precursors in the labdane family, communic acid, cummunol and biformene. These labdanes are diterpenes (C20H32) and trienes which means that the organic skeleton has three alkene groups available for polymerization. As amber matures over the years, more polymerization will take place as well as isomerization reactions, crosslinking and cyclization. The average composition of amber leads to the general formula C10H16O.Amber should be distinguished from copal.
Molecular polymerisation caused by pressure and heat transforms the
resin first into copal and then over time through the evaporation
of turpenes it is transformed into amber. Baltic amber is
distinguished from the various other ambers from around the world,
by the presence within it of succinic acid, hence Baltic amber is
otherwise known as succinite.
Amber in geology
The oldest amber originates from the Upper Carboniferous period approximately 345 million years ago. The oldest known amber containing insects comes from the Lower Cretaceous, approximately 146 million years ago).Commercially most important are the deposits of
Baltic and Dominican amber. They both are of tertiary age (40-50 Ma
respectively 25-40 Ma).
Baltic amber or succinite (historically
documented as Prussian amber) is found as irregular nodules in a
marine glauconitic sand, known as blue earth, occurring in the
Lower Oligocene strata
of Sambia in
Kaliningrad
Oblast, where it is now systematically mined. It appears,
however, to have been partly derived from yet earlier Tertiary deposits
(Eocene);
and it occurs also as a derivative mineral in later formations,
such as the drift. Relics of an abundant flora occur as inclusions
trapped within the amber while the resin was yet fresh, suggesting
relations with the flora of Eastern Asia and the southern
part of North
America. Heinrich
Göppert named the common amber-yielding pine of the Baltic
forests Pinites succiniter, but as the wood, according to some
authorities, does not seem to differ from that of the existing
genus it has been also called Pinus succinifera. It is improbable,
however, that the production of amber was limited to a single
species; and indeed a large number of conifers belonging to
different genera are represented in the amber-flora.
Dominican amber is considered retinite, since it
has no succinic acid. There are three main sites in the Dominican
Republic: La Cordillera Septentrional, in the north, Bayaguana and
Sabana, in the east. In the northern area, the amber-bearing unit
is formed of clastic rocks, sandstone accumulated in a deltaic or
even deep-water environment. The oldest, and hardest of this amber
comes from the mountain region north of Santiago area, from the
mines at La Cumbre, La Toca, Palo Quemado, La Bucara, and Los
Cacaos mining sites in the Cordillera Septentrional not far from
Santiago. Amber in these mountains is tightly embedded in a lignite
layer of sandstone.
There is also amber in the south-eastern
Bayaguana/Sabana area. It is softer, sometimes brittle and suffers
oxidation after being taken from the mines, therefore less
expensive. There is also copal found with only an age of 15-17
million years. In the eastern area, the amber is found in a
sediment formation of organic-rich laminated sand, sandy clay,
intercalated lignite as well as some solated beds of gravel and
calcarenite.
Both, Baltic and Dominican amber, are rich
sources of fossils and give much information about life in the
ancient forests.
Amber from the Middle Cretaceous is
known from Ellsworth
County, Kansas. This approximately 100 million year old amber
has inclusions of bacteria and amoebae. They are
morphologically very close to Leptothrix, and
the modern genera Pontigulasia
and Nebela.
Morphological stasis is considered to be confirmed.
Amber inclusions
The resin contains, in addition to the
beautifully preserved plant-structures, remains of insects,
spiders, annelids, frogs, crustaceans and other small organisms
which were trapped by the sticky surface and became enveloped while
the exudation was fluid. In most cases the organic structure has
disappeared, leaving only a cavity, with perhaps a trace of
chitin. Even hair and
feathers have occasionally been represented among the enclosures.
Fragments of wood frequently occur, with the tissues well-preserved
by impregnation with the resin; while leaves, flowers and fruits
are occasionally found in marvelous perfection. Sometimes the amber
retains the form of drops and stalactites, just as it exuded from
the ducts and receptacles of the injured trees. It is thought that,
in addition to exuding onto the surface of the tree, amber resin
also originally flowed into hollow cavities or cracks within trees,
thereby leading to the development of large lumps of amber of
irregular form. The abnormal development of resin has been called
succinosis. Impurities are quite often present, especially when the
resin dropped on to the ground, so that the material may be useless
except for varnish-making, whence the impure amber is called
firniss. Enclosures of pyrites may give a bluish colour
to amber. The so-called black amber is only a kind of jet. Bony
amber owes its cloudy opacity to minute bubbles in the interior of
the resin.
Not all amber is translucent, becoming
transparent when the surfaces are polished, thus revealing
inclusions. The technique of inspecting darkly clouded and even
opaque amber for inclusions, through bombarding it with
high-energy, high-contrast, high-resolution x-rays, is being
developed at the
European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. Nearly 360 fossil
invertebrates have been discovered from opaque amber found at
Charentes,
France: primitive wasps, flies, ants and spiders, particularly
those measuring just a few millimeters. Three-dimensional images of
the trapped organisms are built up through microtomography, showing
detail on the scales of micrometres. An enlarged
plastic three-dimensional model can be obtained of an organism that
has remained embedded in the amber, suggesting alternative means of
cataloguing new species trapped in amber.
Amber locations
Baltic amber
Baltic amber has a very wide distribution, extending over a large part of northern Europe and occurring as far east as the Urals.Baltic amber yields on dry distillation succinic
acid, the proportion varying from about 3% to 8%, and being
greatest in the pale opaque or bony varieties. The aromatic and
irritating fumes emitted by burning amber are mainly due to this
acid. Baltic amber is distinguished by its yield of succinic acid,
hence the name succinite proposed by Professor James
Dwight Dana, and now commonly used in scientific writings as a
specific term for the Prussian amber. Succinite has a hardness
between 2 and 3, which is rather greater than that of many other
fossil resins. Its specific gravity varies from 1.05 to 1.10. An
effective tool for Baltic amber analysis is IR
spectroscopy. It enables the distinction between Baltic and
non-Baltic amber varieties because of a specific carbonyl absorption and it can
also detect the relative age of an amber sample. On the other hand,
it has been suggested by scientists that succinic acid is no
original component of amber, but a degradation product of abietic
acid. (Rottlaender,
1970)
Although amber is found along the shores of a
large part of the Baltic Sea and
the North
Sea, the great amber-producing country is the promontory of
Sambia, now
part of Russia. About 90% of
the world's extractable amber is located in the Kaliningrad region
of Russia on the Baltic Sea. Pieces of amber torn from the seafloor
are cast up by the waves, and collected at ebb-tide. Sometimes the
searchers wade into the sea, furnished with nets at the end of long
poles, which they drag in the sea-weed containing entangled masses
of amber; or they dredge from boats in shallow water and rake up
amber from between the boulders. Divers have been employed to
collect amber from the deeper waters. Systematic dredging on a
large scale was at one time carried on in the Curonian
Lagoon by Messrs Stantien and Becker, the great amber merchants
of Königsberg.
At the present time extensive mining operations are conducted in
quest of amber. The pit amber was formerly dug in open works, but
is now also worked by underground galleries. The nodules from the
blue earth have to be freed from matrix and divested of their
opaque crust, which can be done in revolving barrels containing
sand and water. The sea-worn amber has lost its crust, but has
often acquired a dull rough surface by rolling in sand.
Since the establishment of the Amber Road,
amber (which is also commonly referred to as the "Lithuanian gold")
has substantially contributed to Lithuanian
economy and culture. Nowadays amber jewelry and amberware is
offered to foreign tourists in most souvenir shops as distinctive
to Lithuania and its cultural
heritage. The Amber
Museum has been established in Palanga, near the
sea coast. Amber can also be found in Latvia.
Dominican Amber
Since the book and movie Jurassic
Park, Dominican
amber has become world famous. Dominican amber differentiates
itself from Baltic amber
by being mostly transparent, and has a higher number of fossil inclusions. This has
enabled the detailed reconstruction of the ecosystem of a
long-vanished tropical forest. Resin from the extinct species
Hymenaea
protera is the source of Dominican amber and probably of most
amber found in the tropics. It is not "succinite" but "retinite". In contrast to much
Baltic amber, Dominican amber found on the world market is natural
amber the way it comes from the mines, and has not been enhanced or
received any chemical or physical change. The age of Dominican
amber is around 40 million years.
Although all Dominican amber is fluorescent, the
rarest Dominican Amber is Blue amber. It
turns blue in natural sunlight and any other light source that has
a slight component of UV (Ultra
Violet). In long-wave UV light it has a very strong reflection,
almost white. Only about 100 kilos of this fossilized tree is found
per year, which makes it valuable and expensive.
Dominican
Amber, and especially Dominican blue amber is
mined through bell pitting, which is extremely dangerous. Bell pitting is
basically a foxhole dug with whatever tools are available. Machetes
do the start, some shovels, picks and hammers may participate
eventually. The pit itself goes as deep as possible or safe,
sometimes vertical, sometimes horizontal, but never level. It
snakes into hill sides, drops away, joins up with others, goes
straight up and pops out elsewhere. Rarely are the pits large
enough to stand in, and then only at the entrance. Miners crawl
around on their knees using short-handled picks, shovels and
machetes. The amber that is found is either directly sold as rough
or raw pieces or cut and polished without any additional treatments
or enhancements.
The most common use for Dominican
Amber is as ornaments and jewelry, while the more valuable
enclosures and colorations become priced exhibition pieces both in
private and public collections. In Far East, Blue
Amber has been masterfully worked into artistic carvings. Others
have used Blue Amber to
make jewelry that can be
especially attractive for its natural fluorescence under UV lights. In the
Muslim world
Dominican
Amber and particularly Blue Amber
beads have found their way
into another use as worry beads,
since Dominican Amber can very easily be worked.
Other locations
Amber deposits are found around the world. Some
are much older than the well known amber deposits in the Baltic
countries and the Dominican Republic, others are much younger. Some
amber is considered to be up to 345 million years old
(Northumberland USA).
A lesser known source of amber is in the Ukraine,
within a marshy forested area on the Volyhn-Polesie border. Due to
the shallow depth at which this amber is found it can be extracted
with the simplest of tools, and has hence led to an economy of
'amber poaching' under cover of the forest. This Ukrainian amber
has a wide range of colours, and was used in the restoration of
'amber room' in the Empress Catherines palace in St Petersberg (see
below).
Rolled pieces of amber, usually small but
occasionally of very large size, may be picked up on the east coast
of England, having probably been washed up from deposits under the
North Sea. Cromer is the
best-known locality, but it occurs also on other parts of the
Norfolk
coast, such as Great
Yarmouth, as well as Southwold,
Aldeburgh
and Felixstowe in
Suffolk,
and as far south as Walton-on-the-Naze
in Essex,
whilst northwards it is not unknown in Yorkshire. On the
other side of the North Sea, amber is found at various localities
on the coast of the Netherlands and
Denmark. On the shores of the Baltic it occurs not only on the
German and Polish coast but in the south of Sweden, in Bornholm and other
islands, and in southern Finland. Some of
the amber districts of the Baltic and North Sea were known in
prehistoric times, and led to early trade with the south of Europe
through the Amber Road.
Amber was carried to Olbia on the Black Sea,
Massilia (today Marseille) on the
Mediterranean,
and Adria at
the head of the Adriatic; and from
these centres it was distributed over the Ancient
Greek world.
Amber is found in Switzerland, Austria and
France. Amber from the Swiss Alps is
about 55 - 200 million years old, amber from Golling about 225 -
231 million years. The well-known SicilianAmber(Simetit - copal) is
just 10 - 20 million years old.
In Africa, copal is found in the coastal
countries of East and West Africa, but especially on Madagascar. This
so-called Madagascar Amber is only 1,000 - 10,000 years old and
consists of the solidified resin of the amber pine. Nigeria also
has amber, which is about 60 million years old.
In Asia amber can be found especially in Burma (former Burma /
Myanmar) as Burmit. It is about 50 million years and the Lebanon
amber 130 - 135 million years old. Amber of the Australian-oceanic
area can be found in New Zealand
and Borneo
(Sawak amber). They are about 20 - 60, part 70 - 100 million years
old.
Amber is also found to a limited extent in the
United
States, as in the green-sand of New Jersey,
but it has little economic value. Middle Cretaceous amber has also
been found in Ellsworth
County, Kansas. It has little value for jewelry makers, but is
very valuable to biologists. The source of this amber is under a
man-made lake.
A fluorescent amber occurs also in the southern
state of Chiapas in Mexico, and is used
for eye-catching jewellery. In Central America, the Olmec
civilization was mining amber around 3000 B.C. There are legends in
Mexico that mention the use of amber in adorning, consuming and
using it for stress reduction as a natural remedy.
Indonesia is also a rich source of amber with
large fragments being unearthed in both Java and Bali.
Amber treatments
The Vienna amber factories which use pale amber to manufacture pipes and other smoking tools, turn it on a lathe and polish it with whitening and water or with rotten stone and oil. The final lustre is given by friction with flannel.When gradually heated in an oil-bath, amber
becomes soft and flexible. Two pieces of amber may be united by
smearing the surfaces with linseed oil,
heating them, and then pressing them together while hot. Cloudy
amber may be clarified in an oil-bath, as the oil fills the
numerous pores to which the turbidity is due. Small fragments,
formerly thrown away or used only for varnish, are now used on a
large scale in the formation of "ambroid" or "pressed amber". The
pieces are carefully heated with exclusion of air and then
compressed into a uniform mass by intense hydraulic pressure; the
softened amber being forced through holes in a metal plate. The
product is extensively used for the production of cheap jewellery
and articles for smoking. This pressed amber yields brilliant
interference colors in polarized light. Amber has often been
imitated by other resins like copal and kauri, as well as by celluloid and even glass. Baltic amber is sometimes
colored artificially, but also called "true amber".
Often amber (particularly with insect inclusions)
is counterfeited using a plastic resin. A simple test consists of
touching the object with a heated pin and determining if the
resultant odor is of wood resin. If
not, the object is counterfeit, although a positive test may not be
conclusive owing to a thin coat of real resin. Often counterfeits
will have a too perfect pose and position of the trapped
insect.
Amber art and ornament
Amber was much valued as an ornamental material in very early times. It has been found in Mycenaean tombs; it is known from lake-dwellings in Switzerland, and it occurs with Neolithic remains in Denmark, whilst in England it is found with interments of the bronze age. A cup turned in amber from a bronze-age barrow at Hove is now in the Brighton Museum. Beads of amber occur with Anglo-Saxon relics in the south of England. Amber was valued as an amulet and it is still believed to possess medicinal properties.Amber is used for beads and ornaments, and for
cigar-holders and the mouth-pieces of pipes. It is regarded by the
Turks as
specially valuable, inasmuch as it is said to be incapable of
transmitting infection as the pipe passes from mouth to mouth. The
variety most valued in the East is the pale straw-colored, slightly
cloudy amber. Some of the best qualities are sent to Vienna for the
manufacture of smoking appliances.
The Amber Room was
a collection of chamber wall panels commissioned in 1701 for the
king of Prussia, then given
to Tsar Peter
the Great. The room was hidden in place from invading Nazi forces in 1941,
who upon finding it in the Catherine Palace, disassembled it and
moved it to Königsberg.
What happened to the room beyond this point is unclear, but it may
have been destroyed when the Russians burned the German
fortification where it was stored. It is presumed lost. It was
re-created in 2003.
Amber has also been used to create the "frog"
part of a Violin bow. It was commissioned by Gennady Filimonov and
made by the late American Master Bowmaker Keith
Peck
See also
References
External links
- The World of Amber Professor Aber's amber page, Earth Science Department of Emporia State University
- Farlang many full text historical references on Amber Theophrastus, George Frederick Kunz, and special on Baltic amber.
- IPS Publications on amber inclusions International Paleoentomological Society: Scientific Articles on amber and its inclusions
- Webmineral on Amber Physical properties and mineralogical information
- Mindat Amber Image and locality information on amber
- NY Times 40 million year old extinct bee in Dominican amber
amber in Arabic: كهرمان
amber in Asturian: Ámbar
amber in Belarusian: Бурштын
amber in Bosnian: Ćilibar
amber in Catalan: Ambre
amber in Czech: Jantar
amber in Welsh: Ambr
amber in Danish: Rav
amber in German: Bernstein
amber in Estonian: Merevaik
amber in Modern Greek (1453-): Κεχριμπάρι
amber in Spanish: Ámbar
amber in Esperanto: Sukceno
amber in Persian: کهربا
amber in French: Ambre
amber in Galician: Ámbar
amber in Korean: 호박 (화석)
amber in Ido: Sucino
amber in Icelandic: Raf
amber in Italian: Ambra (resina)
amber in Hebrew: ענבר
amber in Latvian: Dzintars
amber in Lithuanian: Gintaras
amber in Hungarian: Borostyán (ásvány)
amber in Dutch: Barnsteen
amber in Japanese: コハク
amber in Norwegian: Rav
amber in Polish: Bursztyn
amber in Portuguese: Âmbar
amber in Romanian: Chihlimbar
amber in Russian: Янтарь
amber in Simple English: Amber
amber in Slovak: Jantár
amber in Slovenian: Jantar
amber in Serbian: Ћилибар
amber in Serbo-Croatian: Jantar
amber in Finnish: Meripihka
amber in Swedish: Bärnsten
amber in Tamil: அம்பர்
amber in Vietnamese: Hổ phách
amber in Turkish: Kehribar
amber in Ukrainian: Бурштин (смола)
amber in Chinese: 琥珀