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Agate vs. jasper vs. chert

They’re all microcrystalline quartz — but you can tell them apart in the field with your hands, a light source and a loupe.

Agate, jasper and chert are close cousins (all chalcedony / cryptocrystalline quartz, hardness ~7). The difference is mostly translucency, pattern and luster.

The quick test: backlight it

Hold a wet stone (or a thin edge) up to a strong light:

Agate

  • Translucent — light passes through edges
  • Often banded or has fortification patterns
  • Waxy to glassy luster
  • A type of chalcedony

Jasper

  • Opaque — no light through
  • Solid colors: red, yellow, green, brown
  • Smooth, sometimes earthy luster
  • Iron/clay impurities give the color

Chert (& flint)

  • Opaque, dull to slightly waxy
  • Muted gray, tan, brown; less vivid than jasper
  • Sedimentary, often in nodules/beds; conchoidal fracture
  • “Flint” is just dark chert

Other clues

  • Hardness ~7 — all three scratch glass; this rules out softer look-alikes.
  • Fracture — smooth, curved (conchoidal) with sharp edges.
  • Banding says agate; vivid solid color says jasper; dull & muted says chert.
  • Mixes exist — “jasp-agate” is part banded, part solid.
Field shortcut. Wet + backlight. See-through and banded → agate. Solid and colorful but no light → jasper. Dull and gray → chert.
SourcesUSGS mineral resources · Mindat (chalcedony, jasper, chert) · standard field-geology references.

Written by The Field & Stone Editors · Published by KEVALEX Group.

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