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onyx marble
noun
A banded variety of marble or calcium carbonate resembling onyx. It is obtained from Mexico.
Exact(9)
Brecciated, coloured marbles, onyx marble, and verd antique are used principally for interior decoration and for novelties.
Onyx marble was the "alabaster" of the ancients, but alabaster is now defined as gypsum, a calcium sulfate rock.
The name was used by the Romans for a variety of stones including alabaster, chalcedony, and what is now known as onyx marble.
Mango onyx marble panels line the right-hand wall, with a Turkish bath, sauna, shower and a gym further on the other side.
Some coarsely crystalline diagenetic limestones are among the most widely used commercial "marbles". Travertine and onyx marble (banded calcite) are also popular facing stones, usually for interior use.
In the living room, the nearly six-foot-tall onyx marble fireplace is flanked by glass vitrines, and pocket doors lead to the library, where a television and a built-in marble service bar are secreted behind faux bookcases.
Similar(51)
The so-called onyx marbles consist of concentric zones of calcite or aragonite deposited from cold-water solutions in caves and crevices and around the exits of springs.
The Embassy, housed in Saddam Hussein's old Republican Palace, is a warren of high-ceilinged rooms, great halls, and stairways, decorated in onyx and marble.
The altar is made of onyx and marble.
Designed by Squire & Partners the building relies on black onyx, Nettuno marbles, Portland stone, Tanganika timber and carpets made from wool and silk to achieve its classic, sophisticated look.
Limbaugh led me into his private humidor, selected two La Flor Dominicana Double Ligero Chisel stogies for us to smoke and seated me at an onyx-and-marble table in the study.
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