Onyx Identifier —
Natural, Dyed, or Black Glass?
Upload a photo of your onyx — jewellery, cabochon, carving, or bead — and our AI identifies whether it is natural black onyx, dyed chalcedony, black glass, or another black simulant. Our tool assesses surface quality, banding, and structural features to give you a complete expert result in seconds. Free, no sign-up required.
What You Get in Every Result
- Onyx verdict — Natural / Dyed Chalcedony / Simulant
- Confidence percentage with full visual reasoning
- Variety — Black Onyx, Sardonyx, Green Onyx, Banded Onyx, White Onyx
- Surface quality and luster assessment
- Banding visibility and pattern assessment
- Simulant identification — black glass, dyed howlite, obsidian, jet
- Geographic origin indicators
- Historical use in cameos and intaglios
- Collector value and care advice
Onyx Identifier
Identify onyx (banded chalcedony / black chalcedony) vs agate, obsidian, glass, and dyed stones
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Description
Origin / formation
Is Onyx (chalcedony)
Onyx type hint
Banding / layers
Luster / translucency
Dye / treatment
vs look-alikes
Synthetic / glass
Probable origin
Hardness (Mohs)
Luster
Rarity
Relative value
Notable localities / regions
Typical colours
Key properties
Similar materials
Alternative identifications
Note: Solid black “onyx” is often dyed chalcedony; natural vs dyed and obsidian vs glass usually need magnification (dye lines), RI/SG, or lab testing. Photo ID is a starting point, not an appraisal.
What Is Onyx — and Why Is Almost All “Black Onyx” Dyed?
Onyx is a variety of chalcedony — microcrystalline quartz — characterised by its parallel banding. True onyx has straight, parallel bands of alternating colours, most commonly black and white. The term is widely used in commerce to describe solid black chalcedony, but this usage reveals a critical fact: naturally occurring jet-black onyx is extremely rare. The overwhelming majority of black onyx sold commercially is grey or brownish chalcedony that has been artificially blackened by a dyeing or sugar-acid treatment process — a practice that dates back to ancient Rome and is so universal that it is generally accepted as standard in the trade.
Understanding this context is essential for any onyx identification. When our AI identifies a specimen as “natural onyx,” it means genuine chalcedony with natural or traditionally accepted treatment. When it identifies “dyed chalcedony,” it means the colour is artificially produced. When it identifies a simulant, it means the material is not chalcedony at all.
Onyx vs agate — what is the actual difference?
Onyx and agate are both banded chalcedony — the same mineral. The distinction is band geometry. Agate has curved, wavy, irregular banding that follows the shape of the cavity in which it grew. Onyx has straight, parallel bands. Both are microcrystalline quartz with the same hardness (Mohs 7), specific gravity, and optical properties. The commercial distinction is significant — “black onyx” typically refers to solid black chalcedony (naturally or artificially coloured) while “agate” refers to banded material with curved bands. In antiquity, the terms were not distinguished consistently.
Onyx Varieties — Black, Sardonyx, Green, and More
The commercial term “onyx” covers several distinct varieties. Our AI identifies all of them and distinguishes between naturally occurring varieties and those that are routinely treated or named by commercial convention rather than strict mineralogical definition.
The Chalcedony Family — Where Onyx Belongs
Onyx is one of many gem varieties within the chalcedony group — all sharing the same mineral base (microcrystalline SiO₂ quartz) but differentiated by colour, banding, and inclusions. Understanding the family places onyx in context and clarifies how it relates to other common stones:
“True onyx — straight-banded black-and-white chalcedony — is the cameo carver’s ideal material. The hardness of quartz allows fine detail; the contrasting bands allow portrait carving in relief (cameo) or incised into the stone (intaglio), with the figure in one colour appearing against the contrasting background of another layer. This is why sardonyx and banded onyx were the most prized gems in Rome — not for their scarcity but for their utility as a medium of artistic expression.”
Black Onyx Treatment — The Sugar-Acid Process
The blackening of chalcedony is one of the oldest gemstone treatments in the world — described by Roman author Pliny the Elder in his first-century CE encyclopaedia. The process exploits chalcedony’s porosity to introduce carbon permanently into the stone’s microstructure.
Iron salt dyeing — a second blackening method
Chalcedony can also be blackened by soaking in iron sulphate solution and then heating — the iron penetrates the pores and oxidises to black iron oxide on heating. This produces a somewhat different surface quality than the sugar-acid method and may produce a slightly brownish-black rather than pure carbon-black. Both methods are permanent. Our AI analyses surface luster and colour uniformity for indicators of treatment method, though definitive treatment type determination requires laboratory analysis.
Onyx Look-Alikes — Black Stone Confusions
Several black or dark stones are sold as onyx or confused with it. Each has distinct properties that distinguish it from genuine chalcedony-based onyx:
The streak test — distinguishing onyx from jet and glass
The streak test is a simple mineralogy technique where you scratch the stone across unglazed porcelain (the unfinished bottom of a ceramic tile or plate works perfectly). Onyx (chalcedony, Mohs 7) is harder than porcelain (about Mohs 6.5) and leaves a white scratch mark on the porcelain surface, or no mark at all. Jet (Mohs 2.5–4) and glass (Mohs 5–6) are softer — they leave coloured or grey streaks and are scratched by the porcelain. Black tourmaline and spinel (Mohs 7.5–8) are harder than porcelain and also leave white marks. This test takes seconds and eliminates the most common black stone simulants.
Onyx in History — Cameos, Signets, and Mourning Jewellery
Onyx has a history of human use spanning over 4,000 years, with its most significant cultural role being as the medium of choice for cameo and intaglio carving — a tradition that defines Western glyptic art:
- Ancient Rome and the cameo tradition. Sardonyx and banded onyx were among the most valued gem materials in ancient Rome — not for their scarcity but for their unique utility. The alternating hard layers of different colours allowed master carvers (glyptographers) to carve portraits and mythological scenes in relief, with the figure appearing in one colour band against a contrasting background. The Gemma Augustea — a large sardonyx cameo showing the Emperor Augustus — is among the finest surviving examples of Roman gem carving.
- Signet rings. Intaglio-carved onyx and sardonyx signets were used throughout antiquity to authenticate documents by pressing the engraved design into wax. Julius Caesar, Pompey, Nero, and virtually every significant Roman figure used onyx or sardonyx signets. The hardness of chalcedony made it ideal for a tool used daily — it resisted wear better than softer stones.
- Victorian mourning jewellery. Black onyx became central to Victorian mourning culture following Prince Albert’s death in 1861, when Queen Victoria wore black mourning dress — and black jewellery — for the remaining 40 years of her reign. Black onyx set in gold became the standard mourning jewellery material, worn to signal grief and social solidarity. This Victorian black onyx tradition created enormous demand and established the commercial importance of black chalcedony dyeing.
- Art Deco. The Art Deco movement of the 1920s and 1930s embraced black onyx as a signature material — its clean, geometric black surface suited the movement’s bold geometric aesthetic perfectly. Cartier, Van Cleef, and the great French houses created iconic black onyx and diamond pieces in this period, many of which are now among the most valuable antique jewellery pieces at auction.
- Men’s accessories. Black onyx has remained consistently popular in men’s jewellery — signet rings, cufflinks, and tie pins — because its matte to polished black surface provides a sophisticated, understated aesthetic suited to formal wear. This is probably the single most consistent commercial application of black onyx across history.
Onyx Care — A Relatively Practical Everyday Stone
Black onyx is one of the more practical gemstones for everyday jewellery. Its high hardness makes it scratch-resistant; its dyed colour is permanently embedded in the stone’s structure and does not fade; and it lacks the cleavage or fragility of softer stones. Here is what to know:
- Hardness. At Mohs 7, onyx resists everyday scratching well — it is harder than most materials it encounters in normal use. It will not scratch easily against metal, wood, or plastic. It can be scratched by quartz (also Mohs 7), topaz (8), or sapphire (9) — so store separately from harder gems.
- Colour stability. The carbon from the sugar-acid blackening process is chemically stable and permanent. Standard black onyx does not fade in light, does not bleed in water, and maintains its colour indefinitely under normal conditions. Unlike dyed howlite or dyed jasper simulants, the colour of genuine treated onyx is not affected by moisture, cleaning, or normal wear.
- Cleaning. Clean with mild soap and lukewarm water, a soft brush to reach settings, and pat dry. Ultrasonic cleaning is generally safe for unincluded, unfractured black onyx. Avoid steam cleaning and harsh chemical cleaners. The polished surface of onyx can be re-polished if it develops surface scratches over time.
- White onyx and marble confusion. If your “white onyx” reacts to acid (fizzes with vinegar), it is calcite-based marble or travertine rather than silica onyx — these softer materials require different care (avoid acids, which etch calcite).
Onyx and sudden thermal shock
Like all microcrystalline quartz, onyx can develop internal fractures from sudden extreme temperature changes — moving from a very cold to very hot environment rapidly. This is an uncommon real-world concern for jewellery but relevant for lapidary work (never quench a hot onyx in cold water) and for ultrasonic cleaning of stones with existing fractures. In normal jewellery wear, thermal shock is not a practical concern.
Frequently Asked Questions
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