Fire of Australia opal explained

The Fire of Australia opal is a 998 gram uncut opal mined by Walter Bartram in 1946 at the Eight Mile field in Coober Pedy, South Australia.[1] [2]

The opal is just under 5,000 carats; roughly equivalent in size to two cricket balls.[1] Although rough-cut, it is polished on two sides.[3]

Due to the evaporation of an inland sea several million years ago, South Australia is one of the few places on Earth where opals of this size can be created. Around ninety percent of the world's opals are found in South Australia.[1] [3]

After its discovery in 1946, the opal remained in Bartram's family until 2017, when it was sold to the South Australian Museum.[4] The opal was sold for A$500,000, despite its estimated market value of A$900,000 [3] [5] to ensure that it remained uncut.[4] Bartram was determined that the opal remained in Australia, turning down higher offers from overseas buyers to ensure this. "It is such a piece, so outstanding that it would have been a sheer misery to see it go to another destination and be cut up for watch faces or something like that," he commented.[1]

Notes and References

  1. News: Fire of Australia opal to stay at South Australian Museum. ABC News. 19 January 2017 . Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 22 January 2017.
  2. Web site: McCafferty . Georgia . 2017-02-02 . Rare $675,000 opal makes public debut . 2024-06-28 . CNN . en.
  3. Web site: SA Museum Acquires 'World's Finest' $900,000 Fire of Australia Opal. The Adelaide Review. 22 January 2017.
  4. Web site: Fire of Australia opal secured for South Australia . https://web.archive.org/web/20170207114641/http://www.minister.communications.gov.au/mitch_fifield/news/fire_of_australia_opal_secured_for_south_australia#.WIR181N97IU . 2017-02-07 . Ministers for the Department of Communications and the Arts - Government of Australia .
  5. News: 2017-01-23 . Fire of Australia: The return of the world's finest uncut opal . 2024-06-28 . BBC News . en-GB.