Treated Black Opal

By July 19, 2018March 18th, 2021Member News

Dear Members

I have been concerned  for a while about the amount of treated welo opal being passed off as natural black opal.There are thousands wrongly listed on the internet but they are also being sold in Australian retail shops and even on the opal fields.  I asked Natassa Patel a honors graduate from the AIGS school in Bangkok to research on how to tell if the stone is natural or treated if you are on the field and DONT have access to laboratory testing equipment. I welcome your feed back as to how easy you found it to understand? Please find enclosed the attached

 

final natural vs dyed opal[48856]

 

Kind Regards 

 

Paul Sedawie

President of the Opal Association 

http://www.opal.asn.au/opal/