Amber is fossilized tree resin (not sap), which has been appreciated for its color and natural beauty since Neolithic times.
The oldest amber recovered dates to the Upper Carboniferous period (320 million years ago).
Types of amber
Baltic amber
Amber typical varies from light to dark orangy brown
Courtesy Martha Zuniga
Courtesy Martha Zuniga
Blue amber from Dominican Republic
Blue amber is amber exhibiting a rare coloration. It is most commonly found in the amber mines in the mountain ranges around Santiago, Dominican Republic, but also in the eastern parts of the Dominican Republic. Although little known due to its rarity, it has been around since the discovery of Dominican amber.
Burmese amber (99- 112 myo) with huge perfect scorpion
Copal from Madagascar with spiders, termites, ants,
elateridae, hymenoptera, cockroach and a flower
elateridae, hymenoptera, cockroach and a flower
Green amber from Dominican Republic
Caribbean green-honey amber credit: Hermann Dittrich
Caribbean amber is amber from the island of Hispaniola, consisting of Haiti and the Dominican Republic; it is the only island in the Caribbean where amber retinite has been discovered and is mined. Dominican amber is found in various natural colors, among them fluorescent green and blue.
Mexican amber nuggets | by National Museums Scotland
Mexican Amber - found mainly in Chiapas in Mexico, roughly contemporary with Miocene era Dominican amber, and produced by the extinct Hymenaea Mexicana tree, a relative of the Hymenaea Protera tree responsible for producing Dominican Amber.
Read more at http://www.geologyin.com/2016/05/types-of-amber.html#GZCWJjHHUfE7vC2F.99
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