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  • On an auspicious day in November of 1986,

  • 5 Australian miners climbed Lunatic Hill

  • so named for the mental state anyone would be in to dig there.

  • While their competitors searched for opals at a depth of 2 to 5 meters,

  • the Lunatic Hill Syndicate bored 20 meters into the earth.

  • And for their audacity, the earth rewarded them

  • with a fist-sized, record breaking opal.

  • They named it the Halley's Comet opal,

  • after the much larger rocky, icy body flying by the earth at that time.

  • The Halley's Comet opal is a marvel, but its uniqueness is, paradoxically,

  • the most usual thing about it.

  • While diamonds, rubies, emeralds, and other precious stones

  • are often indistinguishably similar,

  • no two opals look the same,

  • thanks to a characteristic called "play of color."

  • This shimmering, dazzling, dancing display of light

  • comes about from a confluence of chemistry, geology, and optics

  • that define opals from their earliest moments, deep underground.

  • It's there that an opal begins its life as something surprisingly abundant: water.

  • Trickling down through gaps in soil and rock,

  • water flows through sandstone, limestone, and basalt,

  • picking up a microscopic compound called silicon dioxide.

  • This silica-enriched water enters the voids inside pieces of volcanic rock,

  • prehistoric river beds, wood and even the bones of ancient creatures.

  • Gradually, the water starts to evaporate,

  • and the silica-solution begins forming a gel,

  • within which millions of silica spheres form layer by layer

  • as a series of concentric shells.

  • The gel ultimately hardens into a glass-like material,

  • and the spheres settle into a lattice structure.

  • The vast majority of the time, this structure is haphazard,

  • resulting in common, or potch, opals with unremarkable exteriors.

  • The tiny, mesmerizing percentage we call precious opals

  • have regions where silica beads of uniform size form orderly arrays.

  • So why do those structures produce such vibrant displays?

  • The answer lies in a principle of wave physics called interference.

  • For the sake of simplicity,

  • let's look at what happens when a single color of light

  • green, with a wavelength of 500 nanometershits a precious opal.

  • The green light will scatter throughout the gemstone

  • and reflect back with varying intensities

  • from most angles suffused, from some entirely dimmed,

  • and others dazzlingly bright.

  • What's happening is, some of the green light reflects off of the top layer.

  • Some reflects off of the layer below that.

  • And so on.

  • When the additional distance it travels from one layer to the next, and back,

  • is a multiple of the wavelengthsuch as 500 or 1000 extra nanometers

  • the crests and valleys of the waves match each other.

  • This phenomenon is called constructive interference,

  • and it amplifies the wave, producing a brighter color.

  • So if you position your eye at the correct angle,

  • the green light reflecting from many layers adds together.

  • Shift the angle just a bit,

  • and you change the distance the light travels between layers.

  • Change it enough, and you'll reach a point where the crests match the valleys,

  • making the waves cancel each other outthat's destructive interference.

  • Different colors have different wavelengths,

  • which translates to varying distances they have to travel

  • to constructively interfere.

  • That's why colors roughly correspond to silica bead sizes.

  • The spaces between 210 nanometer beads are just right to amplify blue light.

  • For red light, with its long wavelengths,

  • the silica beads must be close to 300 nanometers.

  • Those take a very long time to form, and because of that,

  • red is the rarest opal color.

  • The differences in the arrangements of the gel lattices

  • within a particular stone result in a wide range of color patterns

  • everything from broad flash to pin-fire to the ultra-rare harlequin.

  • The circumstances that lead to the formation of precious opal

  • are so uncommon that they only occur in a handful of places.

  • About 95% come from Australia,

  • where an ancient inland sea created the perfect conditions.

  • It was there that the Halley's Comet opal formed some 100 million years ago.

  • Which raises the question: in the next 100 million years,

  • silica-rich water will percolate through the nooks and crannies

  • of some of the discarded artifacts of human civilization.

  • What opalescent plays of light will one day radiate

  • from the things we forget in the darkness?

On an auspicious day in November of 1986,

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