News and Image Credit : http://www.hindustantimes.com/
Google Virgin Rainbow and search results throw up all kinds
of things, including, "A person who has never had sexual intercourse with
somebody of the same gender."
But now Virgin Rainbow of a different kind is garnering
interest in both the online and real world.
It all started after an Australian museum on Monday said it
would exhibit what it believes is the best opal stone ever found -- a
6.0-centimetre (2.4 inch) multi-coloured gem unearthed in the Outback named the
Virgin Rainbow.
The South Australian Museum said the stone, valued at more
than Aus$1.0 million (US$730,000), would go on public display for the first
time in September to mark the centenary of opal mining in the country.
"It's of unequalled quality, it's a fully crystal
opal," museum director Brian Oldman told AFP.
"It's almost as if there's a fire in there; you see all
different colours. As the light changes, the opal itself changes. It's quite an
amazing trick of nature."
Dug up in the South Australia desert town of Coober Pedy in
2003 by local miners, the Virgin Rainbow came into the museum's possession
about 18 months ago and will be part of an exhibition opening in Adelaide next
month.
Some 90% of the world's opals come from South Australia,
once covered by an inland sea which over millions of years provided an ideal
environment for the formation of the stone.
"I think this exhibition will have the finest
collection of precious opals that we believe have been brought to one place in
the world," Oldman added.
Opals were first discovered at Coober Pedy -- widely-known
as the opal capital of the world -- in
1914 by a boy named Willie Hutchison who was on a gold mining expedition with
his father.
No comments:
Post a Comment