Ocean Jasper — Tide‑Kissed Orbs and Agate Rings
Ocean jasper (also called “oceanic jasper”) is a jubilant, orb‑spotted member of the jasper/agate family from Madagascar’s remote shoreline. Imagine paint bubbles frozen in stone: concentric “eyes,” soft color fields, and the occasional tiny cave lined with glittering quartz. It’s microcrystalline quartz at heart—jasper where it’s opaque, agate where it goes translucent—arranged into patterns that look like confetti with a geology degree.
Identity & Naming 🔎
Jasper, agate… or both?
“Jasper” in lapidary shorthand means colorful, opaque microcrystalline quartz. Ocean jasper toggles between jaspery (opaque) and agate‑like (translucent bands), often in the same piece. The orbs are concentric chalcedony growths, sometimes ringed by fine agate.
Trade name with a real place
Ocean jasper is closely tied to the northwest coast of Madagascar. The original material became known for being collected from cliff and tide‑zone exposures—hence the sea‑leaning name. You may also see location nicknames like Kabamby (often green‑yellow) and Marovato (multi‑color orbs).
How the Orbs Form 🌋➡️💧➡️💎
Volcanic canvas
The host rock began as silica‑rich volcanic flows/tuffs (rhyolitic). As hot fluids circulated, they delivered silica that permeated and replaced the rock, laying the groundwork for chalcedony/agate growth.
Seed, ring, repeat
Minute nuclei—tiny cavities or mineral specks—kick off radial chalcedony growth. Chemistry pulses create concentric rings of different colors, sometimes bordered by translucent agate. Neighboring orbs bump and overlap like raindrops on a pond.
Glitter finish
Where cavities stayed open, late silica lined them with drusy quartz. Those are the little glittering pockets that catch the light when you tilt a cab—geology’s equivalent of sequins.
Recipe: rhyolite + silica‑rich fluids + rhythmic chemistry → bull’s‑eyes, bands, and occasional sparkle.
Colors & Pattern Vocabulary 🎨
Palette
- Greens — sage to deep forest.
- Yellows/ochres — common in Kabamby material.
- Reds — iron‑rich rings and fields.
- Pinks/mauves — soft pastels in many orbs.
- White/cream — agate rims and quartz heals.
- Charcoal/black — contrast bands or matrix streaks.
Most pieces are opaque with translucent windows in thin agate bands or around drusy cavities.
Pattern words
- Orbicules / “eyes” — round targets, often with multi‑color rings.
- Ocelli — bull’s‑eye orbs with a contrasting center point.
- Banded agate rims — thin translucent halos outlining orbs.
- Drusy pockets — tiny quartz‑lined caves (sparkle alert).
- Montage fields — overlapping orbs like mosaic tile.
Photo tip: Side‑light at ~30° makes the agate halos glow and drusy glitter without washing out the pastels.
Physical & Optical Properties 🧪
| Property | Typical Range / Note |
|---|---|
| Composition | Cryptocrystalline SiO2 (chalcedony: micro‑quartz + moganite), with iron/manganese pigments |
| Hardness | ~6.5–7 (durable; takes a high polish) |
| Specific gravity | ~2.58–2.64 |
| Structure | Microcrystalline; fibrous chalcedony growth in concentric shells; agate bands locally |
| Fracture / Cleavage | No cleavage; conchoidal to granular fracture |
| Luster | Vitreous on polish; satin on drusy interiors; waxy on weathered skins |
| Transparency | Opaque overall with translucent banded areas |
| Stability | Excellent; color from iron oxides/hydroxides is generally stable |
Under the Loupe 🔬
Radial micro‑fibres
At 10×, many orbs show radial chalcedony structure—tiny fibres shooting outward from a center. Between rings, color shifts with minute changes in inclusion density.
Agate halos
Look for translucent, finely banded rims around orbs. Tilt the slab and you’ll see light creep through those halos like sunrise around islands.
Drusy detail
Drusy pockets are lined with micro‑quartz crystals. Under raking light they sparkle; under magnification you’ll spot sharp, tiny points arranged like sugar on a doughnut. (Tasty metaphor, inedible stone.)
Look‑Alikes & How to Tell 🕵️
Leopard “jasper” (orbicular rhyolite)
Leopardite’s rhyolite matrix is feldspar‑rich and lacks agate halos/drusy quartz typical of ocean jasper. Under magnification, orbs look more like devitrified spherulites with oxide rims than chalcedony rings.
Poppy/orbicular jaspers (various locales)
Similar circular motifs, but many show solid jasper orbs with less translucency and fewer drusy pockets. Ocean jasper often mixes opaque fields with translucent edges.
Dyed composites
Uniform neon colors and repeating patterns suggest resin‑bound or dyed stone. Natural ocean jasper shows organic variation, subtle halos, and non‑repeating orbs.
Orbicular rhyolite vs. orbicular chalcedony
Quick tell: agate rims + drusy lean toward ocean jasper (chalcedony); granular feldspar groundmass without translucent bands leans rhyolite.
Checklist
- Concentric “eyes” with translucent halos.
- Occasional drusy quartz pockets.
- Pastel‑to‑earth palette with gentle, non‑uniform shifts.
At‑home peek
Back‑light a thin edge: agate halos glow; jaspery fields stay opaque. A 10× loupe reveals fine concentric banding rather than painted‑on color.
Locality & Geologic Setting 📍
Coastal Madagascar
Northwestern Madagascar hosts silicified volcanic rocks along the coast. In places the jasper/agate exposures meet the sea, and material has historically been collected at low tide from cliffs and boulders.
Named pockets
Material labeled Kabamby often leans green‑yellow with bold orbs; Marovato is known for multi‑color orbs, pinks, and whites with drusy. Exact looks vary layer by layer—nature doesn’t copy‑paste.
Care & Lapidary Notes 🧼💎
Everyday handling
- Quartz hardness (~7) = good durability.
- Edges can chip if dropped; treat like any polished chalcedony.
Cleaning
- Lukewarm water + mild soap + soft cloth/brush; rinse and dry.
- Avoid aggressive acids/bleach that can haze surfaces or react with iron skins.
Lapidary tips
- Orient slabs so orbs traverse the dome; include a drusy pocket near (not on) the apex for sparkle.
- Take your time on pre‑polish to keep halos crisp; finish with cerium/diamond on soft pads.
- Stabilization is rarely needed; fill only if a cavity compromises structure.
Hands‑On Demos 🔍
Halo glow
Hold a thin edge to a flashlight: many “eyes” reveal glowing translucent rings—instant agate reveal inside the jasper.
Spot the sparkle
Rock the piece under raking light and watch drusy pockets twinkle. It’s subtle, classy glitter—the mineral version of starry seas.
Light joke: ocean jasper is the only tide that stays up when the moon goes down.
Questions ❓
Is ocean jasper a single species?
No. It’s a variety of chalcedony (microcrystalline quartz) with orbicular patterns—jasper where opaque, agate where translucent.
Why do some pieces show “eyes” and others swirls?
Growth conditions vary. Steady chemistry = neat concentric orbs; changing flow/space constraints = stretched or overlapping patterns.
Are the colors natural?
Yes—iron and manganese chemistry writes the palette. If you see neon, uniform hues or dye pooling at drill holes, be skeptical.
How does it differ from orbicular rhyolite?
Ocean jasper usually shows agate halos and drusy quartz; orbicular rhyolite lacks those chalcedony traits and shows feldspar groundmass instead.
Will it fade?
No under normal indoor display. Keep it clean and avoid harsh chemicals; the colors are locked in the silica.