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Burned by baked carnelian? Bummer!

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Author Topic: Burned by baked carnelian? Bummer!  (Read 1339 times)
Talusman
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« on: April 03, 2016, 09:27:45 am »

Bought a couple of carnelian roughs off the Bay last year that were listed as "amazing old carnelian rough from chandler mt. Oregon". The color looked amazing in the photos - including what looked like cornflake/plume peeking out.

When I received them, I noticed that they both had a strangely uniform smooth tan skin. Hadn't seen this on Oregon carnelian before, but shrugged and tucked them away.

I ran across then today and the thought dawned on me that maybe they'd been heat treated. I put them in the saw and I believe my suspicions were confirmed. The red only penetrates a few mm and follows cracks. The inside is pale whitish agate.

I realize there are lots of natural agates that have an orangish/reddish exterior and pale interiors, but based I the weird color of the exterior and the dramatic color I believe these were likely heat treated.

Bought from a reputable seller - he may not have known as this might have been done a while ago.

Still a bummer!

-Jeremy


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phishisgroovin
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« Reply #1 on: April 03, 2016, 10:37:14 am »

actually, i believe these to be natural.
here in Washington SW corner ofthestate its all over the place.

I pulled a few from the ground myself and cut them and they are exactly like this.
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Talusman
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« Reply #2 on: April 03, 2016, 10:47:05 am »

Interesting. Do they have that buckskin brown smooth skin on them?

Thanks!

-Jeremy
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rocks2dust
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« Reply #3 on: April 03, 2016, 12:30:11 pm »

It looks natural agate to me, too. Unfortunate that it didn't have a redder interior, but that's also characteristic of natural northwest carnelian agates - some have more red-orange inside, some less, than the outside reveals. There is some plume agate with carnelian colors in Chandler Mt. area agates, too (see photo below, which is old Moore Ranch).

All that said, I don't recall having seen pieces with a smooth brown side - almost looks like paint in your photos - though nearly anything's possible.
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lithicbeads
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« Reply #4 on: April 03, 2016, 03:38:29 pm »

You can cut and heat treat this natural carnelian.
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Ranger_Dave
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« Reply #5 on: April 03, 2016, 04:14:22 pm »

Put a half inch of sand in an oven proof container.
Place stone on top of sand and cover with another half inch.
Put in cold oven then:
175°F Several hours (overnight is fine)
275°F Four hours
375°F Four hours
475°F – 500°F Four hours
Leave in the oven overnight, without opening the door, or until pan is cold.
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lithicbeads
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« Reply #6 on: April 03, 2016, 07:46:01 pm »

Some folks like togo to 550 F. You  must remember that the color may not penetrate far into the stone. Carnelian beads in India were traditionally "burned" 5 times starting with the rough and ending with the burning of the finished bead or cab. The early burnings were not for color but to slightly soften the rough  at each of the preforming stages. They have made carnelian beads for over 3,000 years and have made untold amounts. A lot of people soak the carnelian slabs in muriatic acid with iron nails in it for a month to add more iron to the quite porous agate. The
Germans were very good at this and they dried the agates in a warm dry environment for 3 months before burning them  to red.
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Talusman
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« Reply #7 on: April 03, 2016, 08:06:30 pm »

Thanks for the recipes - interesting stuff. Not sure my wife would appreciate the rocks emerging from the garage+shop and showing up in the oven :P

I'm wondering if that brown paint-skin is what carnelian looks like after being soaked in HCL and nails for a month.

If I ever cab this stuff up maybe I'll try heating the cab and see if it goes red. Seems like a kiln would be a great help here.

Thanks again,

-Jeremy
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Jhon P
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« Reply #8 on: April 05, 2016, 07:24:11 pm »

What did you pay? want to buy some more? LOL
I bought a milk crate over 1/2 full at an estate sale and got the same results cutting it.
I think I paid $20.00 for it. was thinking about trying to heat treat it. But haven't wanted to burn up that much energy for a test run.


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Talusman
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« Reply #9 on: April 05, 2016, 07:29:52 pm »

Some you win and some you lose. This one was a loser for me - live and learn!

Heat treating these pieces doesn't really interest me other than as a science experiment :P

-Jeremy
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Jhon P
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« Reply #10 on: April 05, 2016, 09:46:54 pm »

I should put it on eBay. Mybe I can get my $20.00 back?
Naw I don't think I will stick someone else with it. I bought a piece of jade off of eBay one time and it turned out to be serpentine. I should of complained and returned it
It did make a nice 3" sphere
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tkcaz
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« Reply #11 on: April 06, 2016, 02:47:51 am »

Is the soaking in acid and heat treatment done to the rough or finished product?
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Tim

lithicbeads
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« Reply #12 on: April 06, 2016, 06:20:43 am »

Finished product as the color does not go in far typically. It then needs to be repolished.
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catmandewe
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« Reply #13 on: April 06, 2016, 11:04:59 am »

Looks typical of agate sitting out in the hot desert sun for a long time before someone found it. Almost everything in Arizona has the reddish coating, commonly called desert varnish.
I have seen it on lots of material in SE Oregon. Not sure where the carnelian came from but it may be natural.

Still pretty cool looking.
Tony
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finegemdesigns
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« Reply #14 on: April 06, 2016, 05:48:10 pm »

All the Brazilian carnelian rough I have bought has probably been baked also. 90% will have the outer color rind (1/2in deep is common) orange and the inside will be gray. There is 10% though that has orange all the way through.

So heated this way by mother nature or man? Who knows for sure except the people mining it.
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