amorphous Simulant amber simulant (natural material)
Copal (Amber Simulant)
Partially polymerised plant resin (labdanoid diterpenes; younger resin; not fully matured/polymerised)
Crystal Structure
#! Species: Copal (partially polymerised plant resin; amber simulant)
#! System: Amorphous (natural resin)
#! Habit: Irregular nodular masses; resinous
amorphous[resinous]:{nodular}
amorphous
none
{nodular}
Quick Facts
Hardness
1.5
Specific Gravity
1.04
Refractive Index
1.53
Optical Character
Isotropic
Interactive Preview
Open this crystal in the CDL Playground to rotate, export, and explore in 3D.
Open in PlaygroundPhysical Properties
Crystal Systemamorphous
Hardness (Mohs)1.5
Specific Gravity1.04
CleavageNone
FractureConchoidal
LustreResinous
Optical Properties
Refractive Index1.53
Optical CharacterIsotropic
FluorescenceOften intense (LWUV; typically brighter than amber, but variable)
Origin & Identification
OriginSimulant
Diagnostic FeaturesAcetone test: surface becomes tacky/sticky in seconds (amber unaffected — definitive field test); softens at lower temperature (~100-150 C vs amber ~200-250 C); FTIR lacks Baltic amber "shoulder" ~1150 cm-1; inclusions appear fresh/undesiccated; surface crazing develops faster; fluorescence often more intense than amber
Colours
Yellow to yellow-orange (similar to amber); pale yellow; transparent to translucent
Common Inclusions
Modern insects (fresh appearancenot desiccated; diagnostic of recent origin); plant matter (less degraded than amber inclusions)
Notes
Partially polymerised plant resin (<40 Ma; often Holocene to Neogene); not fully matured. Key distinction from amber: acetone test — copal becomes tacky/sticky within seconds; amber (fully polymerised) is unaffected. FTIR: lacks the "Baltic shoulder" at ~1150 cm-1 characteristic of mature succinite amber. Rao et al. 2013, Science China Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy (DOI 10.1007/s11433-013-5144-z) [VERIFIED]: amber vs copal by UV-VIS, infrared and Raman spectroscopy — acetone test and FTIR spectral fingerprint confirmed as diagnostic. Commercial sources: Colombia, Madagascar, East Africa, New Zealand. RI essentially identical to amber (1.530-1.545); SG overlaps amber (1.05-1.10); refractometer and float tests cannot reliably distinguish — acetone and FTIR are required.
Interactive Preview
Open this crystal in the CDL Playground to rotate, export, and explore in 3D.
Open in PlaygroundRelated Minerals
Other minerals in the amorphous system
Ambroid (Pressed Amber)
Compressed and fused amber chips (same chemical composition as amber — fossil resin; succinite for Baltic amber)
Bone (Ivory Simulant)
Ca5(PO4)3(OH) (hydroxyapatite; same general composition as ivory dentine) in collagen matrix; technically microcrystalline hydroxyapatite but gemologically treated as amorphous/aggregate biomineral
Chalcedony (Botryoidal)
SiO2
Chalcedony (Massive)
SiO2
Chrysocolla
(Cu,Al)2H2Si2O5(OH)4.nH2O
Coral
CaCO3 (calcareous; polycrystalline calcite + organic matrix); black coral = gorgonin protein