Agat microworlds #9 is a photograph by - MicROCKScopica - which was uploaded on April 25th, 2014.
Agat microworlds #9
Polarized light photomicrograph of a thin section of Brazilian agat. Sample kindly provided by Stefano Avesani.... more
Title
Agat microworlds #9
Artist
- MicROCKScopica -
Medium
Photograph - Polarized Light Photomicrograph
Description
Polarized light photomicrograph of a thin section of Brazilian agat. Sample kindly provided by Stefano Avesani.
"There was a penetration of the light into solid substance so that I seemed to see into things, deep in...".
John Steinbeck was not thinking of rocks when he wrote this sentence in "Travels with Charley - In search of America". However, his feeling exactly reflects what people should think when looking at rock photomicrographs such as in this reportage on a special sample of Agat from Brazil.
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This is an unusual reportage that discloses the secret, marvelous world hidden within stones. I will show how rocks look like when they are seen from within and with the help of a polarizing microscope.
The stone chosen for this reportage is an "Agate" from Brazil. Agate is beautiful also when seen with the naked eye, as in macro images: like the quartz sand grains, agate is made of silica (SiO2), but in a microcrystalline variety called chalcedony.
The origin of agate is a very similar to that of incrustations in water pipes: silica-rich, hot solutions repeatedly deposit thin layers of calcedony that vary in shape, color, transparency and thickness. Sometimes a lining of crystalline quartz is present, like in the center of the image.
The photomicrographs illustrate such amazing variety with the help of interference colors. These are not an artifact but the result of the propagation of polarized light within minerals. Each image represents a fragment of agate a few millimeters across. This agate was sliced down to 30 micrometers, the conventional thickness at which geologists use to study rocks at the microscope.
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All images are transmitted, polarized light photomicrographs of 30-micron-thick rock slices (geological "thin sections"), with width of view ranging from 1 to 5 mm. Images were taken with a Canon Eos 550D camera mounted on the trinocular head of a Zeiss Axioscop 40 Pol microscope.
Technique: Photomicrograph under polarized light, crossed polars plus red tint plate.
Uploaded
April 25th, 2014
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