Copal (Amber Simulant) crystal structure
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

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Physical 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.