Baltic amber
Baltic amber is found in areas surrounding
the Baltic Sea, areas south of Finland and east or north of Gdansk (Danzig),
Poland. That includes East Prussia, Samland, parts of Kšnigsberg (now
Kalingrad, a part of Russia), and even as far as northern Denmark. Today
the main sources of amber are from the Baltic states and the Dominican
Republic. While Dominican amber is sought after for it's likelihood of
inclusions due to it's tropical environment, Baltic Amber is regarded
as higher quality, particularly for jewelry. Compared to all other amber
varieties, Baltic amber is tougher and longer lasting. Additionally,
amber containing succinic acid is considered to be the
only true amber. There have been close to 100 variations of fossil
resins identified to date, and none compare to Baltic amber as they either
do not contain any succinic acid or they contain less than three percent.
During the Eocene Epoch, the Baltic area,
lands south of Finland and east or north of Gdansk (Danzig),
Poland, resembled today's northern Florida, a subtropical forest of plam
and pine trees. The hypothesis
is that during the tertiary time period a great river washed out the
tree resin in this area and deposited it in the delta between Chlapowo
and the Sambian Peninsula. Over millions of years, this deposit of resin
has been buried by several layers of earth. Today Baltic amber is mined
from this strata determined to be 25 to 40 million years old, called "blue
earth."
Though amber is primarily found deep in the Earth's crust, it has been
a highly regarded treasure for thousand's of years, long before mining
technology was introduced. As far back as 4,500 years, archeaologists
say there is evidence that amber was being bought and sold in marketplaces
all over what is now Eastern Europe. The Baltic Sea eventually covered
the blue earth strata, and as the ocean churned and eroded the earth's
surface, amber occasionally washed ashore and was even visible in shallow
ocean areas.
And so before mining for amber ever developed, fishing for amber was
the traditional practice.
Becuase of amber's considereable value, it has had a long history of
ownership controversy. For almost all of the 20th century, the amber
industry was government controlled. But in the late 1980's with the liberalization
of the economies of eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, Poland
led the way for amber's rebirth. In seven years the number of amber workshops
multiplied exponentially from 500 to 6,000. The explosion was similar
to that of the Mexican silver renaissance out of Taxco. Artisans were
trained and new designs were appearing throughout the world. Ironically,
the banishment of silver control in Poland helped to further the industry
even more. Today, you'll find many Polish artisans sculpting and forming wonderully
artistic, superbly crafted pieces of amber and silver jewelry.
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