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  • #16
    Was this the link you used? Ron   http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pu...halcedony.html
    TN formerly CT Visit our store http://stores.arrowheads.com/store.p...m-Trading-Post

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    • #17
      Hoss wrote:

      Was this the link you used? Ron   http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pu...halcedony.html
        Yes Matt, For some reason the link didn't copy correctly from the first post.
      As the USGS states: chalcedony is a catch-all phrase.
      Chalcedony is little more Descriptive than saying "Stone".
      Michigan Yooper
      If You Don’t Stand for Something, You’ll Fall for Anything

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      • #18
        [QUOTE]Ron Kelley wrote:

        Originally posted by Hoss post=115124
        Was this the link you used? Ron   http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pu...halcedony.html
          Yes Matt, For some reason the link didn't copy correctly from the first post.
        As the USGS states: chalcedony is a catch-all phrase.
        Chalcedony is little more Descriptive than saying "Stone".
          There's a lot of local names for the same types of stone . Out west if it feels waxy it chalcedony just another form of Quartz .Very fine-grained variety of the silica mineral quartz. A form of chert, it occurs in a great variety of colours, usually bluish white, gray, yellow, or brown. Other physical properties are those of quartz. For centuries, chalcedony has been the stone most used by gem engravers .

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