GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Copal refers to the general term for a variety of hard, natural resins obtained directly from various tropical trees of the genera Hymenaea and Agathis. Copal is characterized as a hard, translucent odoriferous resinous substance in an intermediate stage of polymerization and hardening between gummy resins and amber. Copals contain communic acids, communol, resene, and volatile oil. They range in color from colorless to a bright yellow-brown. The term was first applied to the substance obtained from Mexico, but copal is now procured also from Brazil, the West Indies, West Africa, Mozambique and Zanzibar, Madagascar, India, Manila, New Caledonia, and New Zealand. Copal from East Africa is most highly valued, particularly the partially fossilized varieties. Copal is used as incense, flavoring, medicines, and in making varnish, lacquer, adhesive, and coatings.
Excerpt from |
Getty Vocabulary, AAT (copal: AAT: 300012910).
NOTES
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AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
IMAGE ASSETS
268417208: UMO. [Caption] Copal. Source: Didier Descouens (Own work), Wikimedia Commons, accessed: August 9, 2016, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Copal_Madagascar.jpg.
WEB RESOURCES
ARCHIVAL RESOURCES
FUN FACTS
TEACHING IDEAS
RULES
SET OPERATOR AS OR
apply to OBJECTS where medium contains copal
apply to objects where number equals 1967.5
Category
rules_operator
OR
General Description
Copal refers to the general term for a variety of hard, natural resins obtained directly from various tropical trees of the genera Hymenaea and Agathis. Copal is characterized as a hard, translucent odoriferous resinous substance in an intermediate stage of polymerization and hardening between gummy resins and amber. Copals contain communic acids, communol, resene, and volatile oil. They range in color from colorless to a bright yellow-brown. The term was first applied to the substance obtained from Mexico, but copal is now procured also from Brazil, the West Indies, West Africa, Mozambique and Zanzibar, Madagascar, India, Manila, New Caledonia, and New Zealand. Copal from East Africa is most highly valued, particularly the partially fossilized varieties. Copal is used as incense, flavoring, medicines, and in making varnish, lacquer, adhesive, and coatings.
Excerpt from |
Getty Vocabulary, AAT (copal: AAT: 300012910).
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
Web Resources
Notes
rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
1967.5
source file
materials_and_techniques-0134.xml.nores