Dictionary Definition
alabaster
Noun
1 a compact fine-textured usually white gypsum
used for carving
3 a very light white
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
alabasterTranslations
variety of gypsum
- Croatian: alabaster
- Portuguese: alabastro
Croatian
Noun
hr-noun mExtensive Definition
Alabaster (sometimes called satin spar) is a name
applied to varieties of two distinct minerals: gypsum (a hydrous sulfate of calcium) and calcite (a carbonate of calcium). The
former is the alabaster of the present day; the latter is generally
the alabaster of the ancients.
The two kinds are readily distinguished from each
other by their relative hardnesses. The gypsum kind is so soft as
to be readily scratched by a finger-nail (Mohs
hardness 1.5 to 2), while the calcite kind is too hard to be
scratched in this way (Mohs
hardness 3), though it does yield readily to a knife. Moreover,
the calcite alabaster, being a carbonate, effervesces on being
touched with hydrochloric
acid, whereas the gypsum alabaster, when so treated, remains
practically unaffected.
Due to the characteristic color of white
alabaster, the term has entered the vernacular as a metonym for white
things, particularly "alabaster skin". The usage as whiteness also
occurs in a line from the poem and song, America
the Beautiful.
Etymology
The origin of alabaster is in Middle English, through Old French alabastre, in turn derived from Latin alabaster and that from Greek αλάβαστρος (alabastros) or αλάβαστος (alabastos), the latter being the word for a vase made of alabaster. This may further derive from ancient Egyptian a-labaste (vessel of the goddess Bast). It has been suggested that the name was derived from the town of Alabastron in Egypt, while an Arabic etymological origin has also been suggested.Types
Calcite alabaster
This substance, the "alabaster" of the Bible, is often termed Oriental alabaster, since the early examples came from the Far East. The Greek name alabastrites is said to be derived from the town of Alabastron, in Egypt, where the stone was quarried, but the locality probably owed its name to the mineral; the origin of the mineral name is obscure. This "Oriental" alabaster was highly esteemed for making small perfume bottles or ointment vases called alabastra, and this has been conjectured to be a possible source of the name. Alabaster was also employed in Egypt for canopic jars and various other sacred and sepulchral objects. A splendid sarcophagus, sculptured in a single block of translucent calcite alabaster from Alabastron, is in the Soane Museum, London. This was discovered by Giovanni Belzoni in 1817 in the tomb of Seti I near Thebes. It was purchased by Sir John Soane, having previously been offered to the British Museum.When cut in thin sheets, alabaster is translucent
enough to be used for small windows, and has been used so in
medieval churches,
especially in Italy. Large
alabaster sheets are used extensively in the
Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels (dedicated 2002) of the
Los Angeles (California) Archdiocese. The cathedral
incorporates special cooling to prevent the panes from overheating
and turning opaque.
Calcite alabaster is either a stalagmitic deposit, from the
floor and walls of limestone caverns, or a kind of travertine, similarly
deposited in springs of calcareous water. Its deposition in
successive layers gives rise to the banded appearance that the
marble often shows on cross-section, whence it is known as
onyx-marble or alabaster-onyx, or sometimes simply as onyx — a term which should,
however, be restricted to siliceous minerals. Egyptian alabaster
has been extensively worked near Suez and near Assiut; there are
many ancient quarries in the hills overlooking the plain of
Tell
el Amarna. The Algerian
onyx-marble has been largely quarried in the province of Oran. In Mexico, there are
famous deposits of a delicate green variety at La Pedrara, in
the district of Tecali, near
Puebla.
Onyx-marble occurs also in the district of Tehuacán and
at several localities in California,
Arizona,
Utah, Colorado and
Virginia.
Gypsum alabaster
In the present day, when the term "alabaster" is used without any qualification, it invariably means a fine-grained variety of gypsum. This mineral, or alabaster proper, occurs in England. However, thousands of gypsum alabaster artifacts dating to the late 4th millennium BC have been found in Tell Brak (present day Nagar), in Syria http://www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_Art/viewOne.asp?dep=3&item=1988.323.8&viewmode=0&isHighlight=1. And in Mesopotamia, a gypsum alabaster sculpture, believed to represent the god Abu, dates to the first half of the 3rd millennium BC http://www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_Art/viewOne.asp?dep=3&viewmode=0&item=40%2E156.Mineral alabaster occurs in England in the
Keuper
marls of the Midlands,
especially at Chellaston in
Derbyshire, at
Fauld in
Staffordshire
and near Newark in
Nottinghamshire.
All these localities have been extensively worked. In the 15th century
its carving into icons and
altarpieces was a
valuable local
industry in Nottingham, as well as a major English export.
Besides examples of these still in Britain (especially at the
Nottingham
Castle Museum, British
Museum and
Victoria and Albert Museum), that trade in itself (rather than
just the antiques trade) has scattered examples as far afield as
the Musée
de Cluny.
Alabaster is also found, though in subordinate
quantity, at Watchet in Somerset, near
Penarth in
Glamorganshire,
and elsewhere. In Cumbria it occurs
largely in the New Red rocks, but at a lower geological horizon.
The alabaster of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire is found in thick
nodular beds or "floors" in spheroidal masses known as "balls" or
"bowls," and in smaller lenticular masses termed "cakes." At
Chellaston, where the alabaster is known as "Patrick," it has been
worked into ornaments under the name of "Derbyshire spar" — a term
more properly applied to fluorspar.
Black alabaster
Black Alabaster is a rare form of the gypsum-based mineral found in only three veins in the world, one each in Oklahoma (USA), Italy, and the People's Republic of China.
Alabaster Caverns State Park, near Freedom,
Oklahoma is home to a natural gypsum cave
in which much of the gypsum is in the form of alabaster. There are
several types of alabaster found at the site, including pink,
white, and the rare black alabaster.
Uses
The finer kinds of alabaster are largely employed
as an ornamental
stone, especially for ecclesiastical decoration
and for the rails of staircases and halls. Its softness enables it
to be readily carved into elaborate forms, but its solubility in
water renders it inapplicable to outdoor work. The purest alabaster
is a snow-white material of fine tiniforni grain, but it is often
associated with an oxide of iron, which produces brown clouding
and veining in the stone. The coarser varieties of alabaster are
converted by calcination into plaster of
Paris, whence they are sometimes known as "plaster
stone."
On the continent of Europe, the centre
of the alabaster trade is Florence,
Italy. Tuscan alabaster
occurs in nodular masses embedded in limestone, interstratified
with marls of Miocene and
Pliocene
age. The mineral is largely worked by means of underground
galleries, in the district of Volterra. Several
varieties are recognized — veined, spotted, clouded, agatiform, and
others. The finest kind, obtained principally from Castellina,
is sent to Florence for figure-sculpture, while the common kinds
are carved at a very cheap rate locally into vases, clock-cases and
various ornamental objects, in which a large trade is carried on,
especially in Florence, Pisa and Livorno.
In order to diminish the translucency of
the alabaster and to produce an opacity suggestive of true marble,
the statues are immersed in a bath of water and gradually heated
nearly to the boiling-point — an operation requiring great care,
for if the temperature is not carefully regulated, the stone
acquires a dead-white, chalky appearance. The effect of heating
appears to be a partial dehydration of the gypsum. If properly
treated, it very closely resembles true marble and is known as
marmo
di Castellina. Sulphate of lime (gypsum) was used also by the
ancients, and was employed, for instance, in Assyrian sculpture, so
that some of the ancient alabaster is identical with the modern
stone.
Alabaster may be stained by digesting it, after
being heated in various pigmentary solutions. In this way a good
imitation of coral
has been produced (alabaster coral).
References
Further reading
J. A. Harrell, "Misuse of the term 'alabaster' in Egyptology," Göttinger Miszellen, v. 119, 1990, pp. 37-42.See also
alabaster in Bulgarian: Алабастър
alabaster in Catalan: Alabastre (mineral)
alabaster in Danish: Alabast
alabaster in German: Alabaster
alabaster in Estonian: Alabaster
alabaster in Spanish: Alabastro
alabaster in French: Albâtre
alabaster in Galician: Alabastro
alabaster in Icelandic: Alabastur
alabaster in Italian: Alabastro
alabaster in Hebrew: אלבסטר
alabaster in Latvian: Alabastrs
alabaster in Lithuanian: Alebastras
alabaster in Hungarian: Alabástrom
alabaster in Dutch: Albast
alabaster in Norwegian: Alabast
alabaster in Polish: Alabaster
alabaster in Portuguese: Alabastro
alabaster in Russian: Алебастр
alabaster in Slovenian: Alabaster
alabaster in Finnish: Alabasteri
alabaster in Swedish: Alabaster
alabaster in Ukrainian: Алебастр
alabaster in Wolof: Albaatar
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
amphibole, antimony, apatite, aplite, arsenic, asbestos, asphalt, azurite, bauxite, billiard table,
bitumen, boron, bowling alley, bowling
green, brimstone,
bromine, brucite, calcite, carbon, celestite, chalcedony, chalk, chlorite, chromite, clay, coal, coke, corundum, cryolite, diatomite, driven snow,
emery, epidote, epsomite, feldspar, flat, fleece, flour, foam, garnet, glass, glauconite, graphite, gypsum, hatchettine, holosiderite, ice, iron pyrites, ivory, jet, kyanite, level, lignite, lily, lime, maggot, magnesite, mahogany, malachite, maltha, marble, marcasite, marl, meerschaum, mica, milk, mineral coal, mineral oil,
mineral salt, mineral tallow, mineral tar, mineral wax, molybdenite, monazite, obsidian, olivine, ozokerite, paper, pearl, peat, perlite, phosphate rock,
phosphorus, plane, pumice, pyrite, pyrites, pyroxene, quartz, realgar, red clay, rhodonite, rock crystal,
rocks, salt, satin, selenite, selenium, sheet, siderite, silica, silicate, silicon, silk, silver, slide, smooth, snow, spar, spinel, spodumene, sulfur, swan, talc, talcum, tellurium, tennis court,
velvet, wollastonite, wulfenite, zeolite