I can give you several sentences.The snow flake melted instantly.I found a flake of obsidian on the ground.That rock will flake easily when struck.You could also use the slang meaning of someone who is eccentric or odd. "That fellow is a real flake!"
A flake is a small, flat piece that falls off of a larger object. When used as a verb, flake means to break off in small pieces or layers. In slang terms, someone who is unreliable or unreliable can be called a flake.
Yes, obsidian has a toxic poison that can make you very sick and/or kill you, if you get it in your body and don't go to the hospital. If you get obsidian in your body, I suggest you call 911. And don't play with it either.
Obsidian is made of volcanic glass and is generally resistant to most acids. However, strong acids like hydrofluoric acid can slowly react with and degrade obsidian over time.
A flake of red pepper typically weighs around 0.5 grams.
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An obsidian scalpel is constructed exactly the same way the early humans made stone knives. A skill stoneworker uses a pressure flaking technique to force a small flake of obsidian from a larger stone. The flake is examined to see if it is a suitable shape for a blade - if not the flake is discarded and the stoneworker gets another flake from the stone. Although very sharp the obsidian blade is very thin and cannot withstand lateral force on the blade. Surgeons must be very careful to cut only soft tissues with the obsidian scalpel. Attempting to cut or scrape bone could result in breakage, which could leave obsidian flakes inside the patient.
I can give you several sentences.The snow flake melted instantly.I found a flake of obsidian on the ground.That rock will flake easily when struck.You could also use the slang meaning of someone who is eccentric or odd. "That fellow is a real flake!"
A snow flake.
Well it is a tool/rock made from volcanic glass. The Aztec used it a lot to build statues and shelter. Obsidian is well suited to 'flaking" or "napping" which is the art of creating a sharp edge. Obsidian will flake down to a molecular edge, being a type of naturally occurring glass it is high on the hardness scale. Even today, some surgical scalpel tips are fabricated from obsidian.
Well it is a tool/rock made from volcanic glass. The Aztec used it a lot to build statues and shelter. Obsidian is well suited to 'flaking" or "napping" which is the art of creating a sharp edge. Obsidian will flake down to a molecular edge, being a type of naturally occurring glass it is high on the hardness scale. Even today, some surgical scalpel tips are fabricated from obsidian.
By flintknapping flintknapping is the art of making stone tools you can Use a hammerstone to break a rock and a sharp flake comes off You can use as a knife the best thing to use is obsidian and flint
fruit flake
Obsidian is a felsic glass. At depth, it will crystallize to form granite. On the other hand it turns into perlite on reacting with water. At high grade it recrystallizes to form felsic glass.
It takes 4 minutes and 10 seconds for any other tool than a Diamond Pickaxe to break an Obsidian block, and no block is dropped.
A Macuahuitl (hand-wood) was a sword with sharp obsidian blades embedded in its sides. They were very sharp and could decapitate a horse. A Huitzauhqui was a wooden club inlaid with obsidian blades.
Pumice is not a mineral; it is a type of volcanic rock with a frothy texture. Obsidian, on the other hand, is a naturally occurring volcanic glass and is considered a mineraloid rather than a true mineral because it lacks a crystalline structure.