opal-formation

How Opal Forms: A (Very) Patient Process

So, picture this: deep underground, silica-rich water is just hanging out, taking its sweet time—like, five million years to deposit one measly centimetre of material. That’s slower than a koala on a lazy Sunday. But when conditions are just right (and Mother Earth feels generous), tiny silica spheres start forming and settling into voids like they’re picking out prime real estate.

If these spheres decide to be uniform in size (150–400 nanometres, because precision matters), BAM! Precious opal is born, flashing rainbow colors like it’s at a disco. If they’re not? Well, tough luck—you get potch, the plain-Jane cousin of opal that miners shrug at and mineralogists call “common opal” (because scientists are polite like that).

Opal’s Favourite Hangouts

Opal isn’t picky—it’ll crash in any available space:

Australia: The Opal Capital of the World

Most of the world’s fancy opal comes from Australia, where the Great Artesian Basin basically runs an opal bed-and-breakfast. You’ve got:

Boulder Opal: The Tough Nut to Crack

Queensland’s boulder opal is the quirky rebel of the opal world. Instead of forming in open cavities, it grows inside ironstone concretions—some as small as a walnut, others as big as a car (because why not?).

These ironstone “Yowah nuts” can hide opal in:

And unlike other opals, boulder opal stays glued to its ironstone backing, like a stubborn kid refusing to leave a trampoline. Cutters often leave it attached for a rustic look—or, if the opal’s thick enough, they’ll set it free for a solo career in jewellery.

The Grand Finale: Picture Stones & Freeform Beauty

Some boulder opals are cut into wild, freeform shapes to show off their natural art—like a Rorschach test, but way more expensive. Collectors go nuts for these “picture stones,” while jewellers just nod politely and stick to the classics.

Conclusion: Opal is a Drama Queen

From volcanic tantrums to sedimentary slow dances, opal forms in the most extra ways possible. It takes millions of years, perfect conditions, and a dash of luck—but when it all comes together? Pure magic.

Now, if only we could convince it to form a little faster