agate
AG-it
A variety of chalcedony — microcrystalline quartz — distinguished by its bands of color, laid down in concentric layers inside volcanic cavities. Cut an agate open and you see the history of its formation: each band a different mineral solution, a different moment in geological time. Agates are found in riverbeds, on beaches, in desert gravel — small, plain stones on the outside, banded worlds within.
Etymology
Greek: achátēs, named for the Achates River in Sicily, where agates were found in antiquity.
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