Porcellanite

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File:Porcelanit, lom Bučník (2).jpg
Porcellanite from the Czech Republic

Porcellanite or porcelanite, is a hard, dense rock somewhat similar in appearance to unglazed porcelain. It is often an impure variety of chert containing clay and calcareous matter.[1]

Locations where Porcellanite has been found include Northern Ireland, Poland and the Czech Republic. Porcellanite is also commonly found in the Northern Territory of Australia. There, it comes in a variety of colours, primarily white, yellow, red and purple.

Tievebulliagh

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File:Dolerite-porcellanite Contact - geograph.org.uk - 472788.jpg
Porcellanite layer is the black rock above the hammer, and below the brown layer higher up the slope at Tievebulliagh
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Porcellanite worked into Neolithic axes, Northern Ireland

Template:Stack end At Tievebulliagh, Northern Ireland, porcellanite is a tough contact metamorphosed hornfels formed from a lateritic soil horizon within a basaltic intrusive/extrusive sequence. The rock is black to dark grey in colour.

Tievebulliagh is the site of a Neolithic axe or stone tool quarry, and there is another quarry on Rathlin Island.[2] It is likely that roughouts or roughly-shaped prehistoric tools (called celts) were chipped on site before transportation both within Ireland and over the Irish Sea to Britain.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". It is also likely that the final polish would have been performed near the site of use in cutting vegetation and trees.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". It was commonly polished on grooved blocks of hard sandstone.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

References

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