Amazing White Plume Agate & lepidolite

$65.00

White plume agate AKA stinking water.
This is some of my favorite material to work with. You will see other pieces made from this , here on my website.
This piece is special because I used thin shavings and stacked them and layered them inside this antique silver pendant, along with hints of thin layers of lepidolite. That’s the pail lavender hints of color you see. I tried to show the layers of color by taking the photos in the sun. They really are amazing.
The pendant is on a 24” gun metal large link chain. I hung it with a snap on bail so if you wanted to swap chains you can just in hook it.
If you want a different chain email the designer and let’s find the right one.
More about the amazing gems and minerals below in descriptions.

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Description

In allusion to the plume-like shapes exhibited in the material. A variety of Chalcedony. A variety of chalcedony with contrasting colored, plume-like structures within the material.
Stinking Water Plume aka White Plume Agate is found near the Stinking Water creek, in eastern Oregon. This area, east of Burns, is quite famous for great rockhounding. It has white to yellowish plumes in a milky white nearly transparent agate.

Plume agate inclusions form when iron oxide, maganese oxide, or other oxides where present during the rock formation. The color of the plumes can vary depending on the material present when the rock forms, and in fact sometimes it can occur in multi-colors.
Lepidolite History
Originally called “lilalite” because of its lavender color, it was later named “lepidolite” from the Greek “lepidos”–which means “scale”–because of its scaly appearance caused by flakes of lithium. … Lepidolite is an important source of lithium, which is the lightest metal in the world.