3.7" Polished Banded Fairburn Agate - Nebraska

This is a spectacular, Fariburn agate nodule section that was collected from the agate beds of Northwest Nebraska. It features multiple filled agate pockets with sharp fortification banding, orange and red coloration, and has been polished to a glossy finish across most of the specimen.

It comes with an acrylic display stand.

Fairburn agate is the trade name for agates that come from the agate beds of Southwestern South Dakota and Northwestern Nebraska. The agate often bears fortification banding: these are sharp-angled bands and small projections that come off of these angles, resembling an overhead view of a castle wall and its fortifications. There are two accepted theories as to how these agates formed: one indicates that they formed in sedimentary limestone, while the other theorizes that they formed within cavities of igneous rock. It is widely believed that they eroded out of the Black Hills of eastern Wyoming and Western South Dakota and were deposited by river into these agate beds. However they may have actually formed in said agate beds, only for the rock to be weathered away. Their red to brown-orange coloration is primarily a result of goethite, magnetite, and hematite impurities within the silica-rich fluids among other oxide minerals.

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DETAILS
SPECIES
Chalcedony var. Agate
LOCATION
Northwest Nebraska
SIZE
3.7 x 2.1 x 1"
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#189399