Mahogany Obsidian â Lavaâs Dark Chocolate Swirl
Mahogany obsidian is obsidian with attitudeâblack volcanic glass brushed with rich, burntâmahogany streaks and patches. Those warm browns come from tiny ironâoxide particles and ironârich layers aligned as the lava flowed. Tilt it in the light and the swirls seem to move, like smoke under glass. If regular obsidian is midnight in a tux, mahogany obsidian is midnight with a leather jacket.
Identity & Naming đ
What it is
Mahogany obsidian is a variety of obsidianâa natural volcanic glassâdistinguished by warm brown coloration juxtaposed with black. Because obsidian is amorphous (no longârange crystal lattice), itâs classified as a mineraloid rather than a mineral.
Why âmahoganyâ?
The color echoes polished mahogany wood: deep redâbrown with subtle variations. In geological terms, that palette is made by iron oxides dispersed in the glass and by slight changes in oxidation during flow and cooling.
How the Pattern Forms đ
Flow banding
As silicaârich lava moves, microscopic crystals (microlites), bubbles, and ironâbearing melt segregate into ribbons. When the lava quenches to glass, those ribbons freeze as the mahogany and black bands you see.
Iron at work
Tiny ironâoxide particles (hematite, magnetite, or their alteration products) and ironârich glass layers lend the brown tones. The size and concentration of these particles control how deep and âwoodyâ the color appears.
Occasional extras
With time and gentle heat, parts of the glass can crystallize radial spherulites (the âsnowflakesâ seen in other obsidian). In mahogany material theyâre less common but can appear as subtle gray blooms.
Recipe: molten silica + a swirl of iron + a sudden chill â chocolateâonâblack glass.
Colors, Patterns & Varieties đ¨
Palette
- Black â the base glass.
- Mahogany brown â from rust to brickâred.
- Umber â darker, ironârich streaks.
Edges are typically translucent teaâbrown under strong lightâclassic obsidian behavior.
Pattern vocabulary
- Swirls & plumes: fluid brushstrokes of brown within black.
- Ribbons: parallel bands following the lavaâs flow.
- Blotches: rounded âpoolsâ of color where ironârich pockets paused.
Photo tip: Use sideâlight at ~30° and a white bounce card opposite the light. The brown warms up, and the banding pops without glare.
Physical & Optical Properties đ§Ş
| Property | Typical Range / Note |
|---|---|
| Type | Natural volcanic glass (rhyolitic to dacitic composition) |
| Structure | Amorphous (nonâcrystalline) |
| Hardness | ~5â5.5 (moderately hard, but brittle) |
| Specific gravity | ~2.30â2.45 |
| Fracture | Conchoidalâcurving âshellsâ; edges can be razorâsharp |
| Refractive index | ~1.48â1.51 (varies) |
| Luster | Vitreous; resinous on weathered skins |
| Transparency | Opaque to translucent on thin edges |
| Magnetism | Nonâmagnetic overall; brown zones may contain tiny iron oxides |
Under the Loupe đŹ
Flow wisps
At 10Ă, look for fine, parallel wisps and streaks within both the black and brown. These are aligned microlites and tiny bubble trains captured by the flow.
Iron hints
Brown patches often show a soft, cloudy texture where subâmicroscopic iron phases scatter light. You wonât see discrete crystalsâjust a gentle haze compared to the glassy black.
Spherulites (occasional)
Rare, pale gray âsnowflakeâ rosettes may occurâtiny radiating needles of cristobalite. Theyâre less common here than in classic snowflake obsidian.
LookâAlikes & How to Tell đľď¸
Mahogany jasper / agate
Microcrystalline quartz (hardness ~7). Feels harder, takes a different polish, and lacks the glassy conchoidal shells seen on chipped obsidian.
Basalt (brownâstained)
Fineâgrained rock with tiny crystals; matte to subâvitreous luster; edges are not âglassy.â Under magnification, crystals are visible instead of homogenous glass.
Industrial glass / slag
Can mimic color, but often shows frothy vesicles, metallic streaks, or swirled metallic sheen. Context (near old furnaces) is a clue.
Dyed composites
Uniform neon browns or repeating patterns suggest artificial composites. Natural mahogany obsidian shows organic, nonârepeating flow patterns.
Quick checklist
- Glassy luster + teaâbrown edges in strong light.
- Curved conchoidal fractures and sharp chips.
- Flowâlike brown swirls, not granular or banded agate textures.
Atâhome tests
Shine a flashlight through a thin edge: mahogany zones glow warm brown; black reads smoky. A hand lens will reveal flow wisps rather than sugary grains.
Localities & Context đ
Where itâs common
Found around felsic volcanic centers. Wellâknown sources include parts of the western USA (e.g., Oregonâs obsidian fields), Mexico, and other rhyolitic provinces worldwide. It forms as rims and domes where lava chilled fast.
Geologic neighbors
Travels with other obsidians (black, sheen, rainbow), rhyolite, perlite (hydrated obsidian), and pumice from the same eruptions. Traceâelement âfingerprintsâ can tie pieces to their volcanic sourcesâan archaeological superpower.
Care & Handling đ§ź
Everyday handling
- Obsidian is brittle; avoid drops and hard impacts.
- Edges can be bladeâsharp. Handle rough chips like you would a knife.
Cleaning
- Lukewarm water + mild soap + soft cloth; rinse and dry.
- Avoid sudden temperature shocksâglass dislikes thermal whiplash.
Display & storage
- Store separately from harder quartz/corundum to keep a crisp polish.
- Sideâlighting around 30° pulls the brown forward beautifully.
HandsâOn Demos đ
Teaâbrown window
Hold a thin edge in front of a flashlight: the âblackâ turns warm brown, especially through the mahogany zones. It never gets old.
Conchoidal shell spotting
Under raking light, trace the curved ripples around a small chip. Each ripple is a frozen shock wave from the break.
Tiny joke: mahogany obsidian is proof lava knows how to do latte art.
Questions â
Is mahogany obsidian a separate mineral?
Noâit's a variety of obsidian (natural volcanic glass) colored and patterned by ironârich components and flow textures.
Does it ever show sheen or rainbow effects?
Occasionally, if thin bubble layers or nanoâlamellae are present, but classic mahogany obsidian is prized for its color contrast rather than iridescence.
How do I tell it from dyed glass?
Look for organic, nonârepeating flow patterns, teaâbrown edge translucency, and absence of frothy vesicles. Dyed composites tend to have uniform color and repeating designs.
Is it good for tools or jewelry?
Historically, obsidian makes superb cutting edges. For jewelry, it takes a high polish and dramatic lookâjust remember itâs brittle, so protective settings are kind.
Will the color fade?
Noâthe brown is inherent to the glass and iron phases. Maintain the surface polish, and the contrast stays striking.