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CROCODILE CARVED FROM AUSTRALIAN ZEBRA ROCK
- SKU
- AAT 267
- Dimensions (mm)
- 83 x 57 x 37mm
- Weight (cts)
- 600
- Type
- Carved
- Colours
-
DESCRIPTION ZEBRA ROCK SLABBED HAND CARVED CROCODILE
VERY ACCURATE HAND CARVING IN BEAUTIFUL PATTERN ZEBRA ROCK
600 MILLION YEARS OF HISTORY
SOURCE WESTERN AUSTRALIA
UP NORTH IN THE KIMBERLEY AREA OF HOT DRY DUSTY DESERT
PIECE AS PER PHOTO
This distinctive reddish-brown and white banded ornamental stone from the East Kimberley, Western Australia, has been known as zebra rock since its discovery in 1924. Some of the original localities, including one about 4.8km southwest of the former Argyle Downs Station, are now submerged beneath the dam waters of Lake Argyle, but there are others
which are still being exploited.
Zebra rock forms lenses and seams, some extending for kilometres, within the Johnny Cake Shale, which is of Late Precambrian age (around
670 million years old). The rock is an “argillite” or clay rock. It is largely made up of clay minerals but also contains tiny angular fragments of quartz and mica flakes, and the mineral, hematite (an iron oxide), which is the main iron-bearing mineral. Most of the clay is the common mineral kaolinite, which forms during weathering of rocks (such as granite) containing feldspar and other aluminium silicates and can be deposited as a sediment in water to eventually make a clay rock like a shale or mudstone.
| Shipping provider | Shipping to Australia | Shipping to rest of world | Combined Shipping (Australia) | Combined Shipping (rest of the world) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FedEx |
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| Registered Shipping |
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- SKU
- AAT 267
- Dimensions (mm)
- 83 x 57 x 37 mm
- Weight (cts)
- 600
- Type
- Carved
- Colours
-
DESCRIPTION ZEBRA ROCK SLABBED HAND CARVED CROCODILE
VERY ACCURATE HAND CARVING IN BEAUTIFUL PATTERN ZEBRA ROCK
600 MILLION YEARS OF HISTORY
SOURCE WESTERN AUSTRALIA
UP NORTH IN THE KIMBERLEY AREA OF HOT DRY DUSTY DESERT
PIECE AS PER PHOTO
This distinctive reddish-brown and white banded ornamental stone from the East Kimberley, Western Australia, has been known as zebra rock since its discovery in 1924. Some of the original localities, including one about 4.8km southwest of the former Argyle Downs Station, are now submerged beneath the dam waters of Lake Argyle, but there are others
which are still being exploited.
Zebra rock forms lenses and seams, some extending for kilometres, within the Johnny Cake Shale, which is of Late Precambrian age (around
670 million years old). The rock is an “argillite” or clay rock. It is largely made up of clay minerals but also contains tiny angular fragments of quartz and mica flakes, and the mineral, hematite (an iron oxide), which is the main iron-bearing mineral. Most of the clay is the common mineral kaolinite, which forms during weathering of rocks (such as granite) containing feldspar and other aluminium silicates and can be deposited as a sediment in water to eventually make a clay rock like a shale or mudstone.
| Shipping provider | Shipping to Australia | Shipping to rest of world | Combined Shipping (Australia) | Combined Shipping (rest of the world) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FedEx |
|
|
|
|
| Registered Shipping |
|
|
|
|
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