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obsidian
[ uhb-sid-ee-uhn ]
noun
- a volcanic glass similar in composition to granite, usually dark but transparent in thin pieces, and having a good conchoidal fracture.
obsidian
/ ɒbˈsɪdɪən /
noun
- a dark volcanic glass formed by very rapid solidification of lava Also calledIceland agate
obsidian
/ ŏb-sĭd′ē-ən /
- A shiny, usually black, volcanic glass. Obsidian forms above ground from lava that is similar in composition to the magma from which granite forms underground, but cools so quickly that minerals do not have a chance to form within it.
Word History and Origins
Origin of obsidian1
Word History and Origins
Origin of obsidian1
Example Sentences
The volcanoes would have created fertile soil and plenty of obsidian rock to craft into tools.
Del Toro’s Nightmare Alley, set in the waning days of the Depression, is neither a remake nor a strict adaptation, but rather a melding of both, its own sleek, obsidian creature.
Romero Villanueva adds that the ancients might have been in search of obsidian.
Among them are bow and arrow technology, specialized tool forms, the long-distance transport of objects such as marine shells and obsidian, personal ornamentation, the use of pigments, water storage, and art.
Based on previous discoveries of items made of obsidian, seashells and other exotic materials at council circles, these structures must have hosted rituals of some kind, says archaeologist Susan Vehik of the University of Oklahoma in Norman.
“I think the main reason is the availability of information and community groups that the Internet provides,” said Obsidian.
Dragonglass: The name accorded to volcanic glass or obsidian.
Around, the floor was composed of solid dark green obsidian, as hard and transparent and sharp as bottle-glass.
Agates, cornelians, obsidian, are also among the products of this nature.
The creation legend of the Cakchiquels of Guatemala makes much of a mysterious, primeval and animated obsidian stone.
In the Melanesian myth, dawn is cut out of the body of night by Qat, armed with a knife of red obsidian.
There was obsidian, evidently brought from a distance—de Morgan thinks from Armenia, a thousand miles away.
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