An opal bracelet. The stone size is 18 by 15 mm (0.7 by 0.6 inches).

The mineraloid opal is amorphous hydrated silica, the water content sometimes being as high as 20%. Being amorphous it has no crystal form, occurring in irregular veins, masses, and nodules. It has conchoidal fracture, vitreous lustre, hardness 5.5-6.6, specific gravity 2.1-2.3, and a highly variable color. Opal ranges from colorless through white, milky blue, gray, red, yellow, green, brown and black. Often many of these colors can be seen at once, caused by interference and diffraction of light passing through minute apertures within the microstructure of opal, known as Bragg's lattice. These apertures are filled with secondary silica and form thin lamellae inside the opal during solidification. The term opalescence is commonly and erroneously used to describe this unique and beautiful phenomenon, which is correctly termed play of color. Contrarily, opalescence is correctly applied to the milky, turbid appearance of common or potch opal. Potch does not show a play of color.

The veins of opal displaying the play of color are often quite thin, and this has given rise to unusual methods of preparing the stone as a gem. An opal doublet is a thin layer of colorful material, backed by a black mineral, such as basalt or obsidian. The darker backing emphasizes the play of color, and results in a more attractive display than a lighter potch. Given the texture of opals, they can be quite difficult to polish to a reasonable lustre. The triplet cut backs the colored material with a dark backing, and then has a cap of clear quartz (rock crystal) on top, which takes a high polish, and acts as a protective layer for the comparativly delicate opal.


''Boulder opal carving of a walrus, showing flashes of colour from the exposed opal. The carving is 9 cm
(3.5 inches) long.

Besides the gemstone varieties that show a play of color, there are other kinds of common opal such as the milk opal (a milky bluish to greenish), resin opal (honey-yellow with a resinous lustre), wood opal (caused by the replacement of the organic material in wood with opal), Menilite (brown or grey), and hyalite, a colorless glass-clear opal sometimes called Muller's Glass.

Opal is a mineraloid gel which is deposited at relatively low temperature and may occur in the fissures of almost any kind of rock, being most commonly found in ironstone, sandstone, and basalt. The word opal comes from the Sanskrit upala, the Greek opallios, and the Latin opalus, meaning "precious stone."

Opal is one of the minerals that can form fossils; the resulting fossils, though not of any extra scientific interest, appeal to collectors.

A large fraction of the world's opal comes from Australia. The town of Coober Pedy, in particular, is a major source. Common, water, jelly, and fire opal is found mostly in Mexico and Mesoamerica.

See also: List of minerals, optical phenomena