Lapidera - Ambar

For collectors, it represents the "bridge" between young copal (thousands of years old) and true amber (millions of years old). For spiritual seekers, it is a stone of purification. For the average Indonesian, it is a local treasure often sold alongside black jet and palm fossil wood.

| Feature | Ambar Lapidera (Indonesian) | Baltic Amber (Polish/Lithuanian) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 1–10 Million Years | 40–60 Million Years | | Origin Tree | Dipterocarp (Tropical) | Extinct Pine (Sciuromorpha) | | Hardness | 2.0 – 2.5 | 2.5 – 3.0 | | Succinic Acid | 3–5% | 8–10% | | Inclusions | Rare. Usually plant debris, termites, or flies. | Common. Spiders, lizards, feathers, plant matter. | | Price (Raw) | $5 – $20 per 10g | $20 – $200+ per 10g | | Statics (Electricity) | Weak attraction to cloth | Strong attraction (electrostatic) | ambar lapidera

It tells the story of a different Earth—the tropical, volcanic, insect-dense world of prehistoric Indonesia. It is the underdog of the amber family: less famous, less hard, but equally beautiful and historically significant. For collectors, it represents the "bridge" between young

Literally translated, Ambar means "amber" in Indonesian and Spanish, while Lapidera hints at "stone" or "lapidary" (the art of cutting stones). However, is not traditional amber. It is not fossilized tree resin from the Cretaceous period. Instead, it is a unique form of fossilized copal or a hardened, semi-fossilized resin that has undergone a specific geological transformation in the volcanic soils of Java and Sumatra. | Feature | Ambar Lapidera (Indonesian) | Baltic