Table Size:60"x30" Inches

1. It can be used as a Dining Table, Guest table, coffee table, center table top in show room as well as a gift 

    for your loved ones.
2. The table top is made in Agra India & fully handmade.
3. The top will be delivered by FedEx or DHL free of cost door to door.
4. If there is any local tax, custom duties or Vat will be paid by the buyer at the destination.
5. The parcel is dispatch with proper packing & fully insured covering all kind of risk.
6. To maintain the table top is simple soap & water & dry cotton cloth.
7.  If You Are Looking Something Customize, Let Us Know We Will Make For You As Per Your Design, Size & 
    Shape.
8. This is only Table Top & Base/Leg is not included.

Marble Agate Table Tops

We are Manufacturer & Exporter of marble agate table tops. These marble agate table tops have different shapes like Round Table top, Octagonal Table Tops, Rectangle / Dining table tops, Square Table tops, Chess Table tops, Taj Mahal Table tops, Custom Designs Table tops also make marble Table top Base and Stand. Then we can be used as dining tables, coffee tables, Center tables, conference tables, chess boards, reading tables, bar tables , Garden table, side and corner tables or any other use as per the indoor and outdoor decor. They can also be placed outdoors in the garden, as marble is stain free, offers great resistance to the forces of nature, and can withstand heavy temperatures. We also meet customized requirement and offer our marble table tops at industry leading prices.

About Agate Stone-
Agate is a rock consisting primarily of cryptocrystalline silica, chiefly chalcedony, alternating with microgranular quartz. It is characterized by its fineness of grain and variety of color. Although agates may be found in various kinds of host rock, they are classically associated with volcanic rocks and can be common in certain metamorphic rocks.

Ancient use of agate stone

Agate is one of the most common materials used in the art of hardstone carving, and has been recovered at a number of ancient sites, indicating its widespread use in the ancient world; for example, archaeological recovery at the Knossos site on Crete illustrates its role in Bronze Age Minoan culture

Types Of Agate
1.  Fortification Agate
    This is the most common and distinctive type of agate. In these agates, bands crystallized into 
    concentric layers that more or less follow the shape of the cavity. The banding resembles an aerial view 
    of a fort
2. Water-Line Agate (also called water-level or onyx)
     During its formation, silica-rich solution either entered the cavity slowly laying one band at a time, 
     excess water drained out leaving a small amount of silica to settle out into separate bands, or the vesicle 
     filled under low pressure. In any case, the silica crystallization in water-level agates is controlled by 
     gravity in one orientation, forming a stack up of parallel bands.
3. Shadow Agate
     Some agates exhibit a shadow effect in which there is what appears to be movement across the agate 
     layers when the specimen is rocked back and forth (or your orientation to the specimen moves). This 
     optical effect only occurs when there are alternating translucent and opaque bands. It is caused when 
     light goes into the agate, but is not reflected out.
4. Tube Agate
     Tube Agate During the formation of some agates, parallel projections of tiny hair-thin mineral rods grow 
     first within the silica gel, around which later the chalcedony agate micro-crystals form. In some cases 
     the inclusions remain, but sometimes they weather away leaving hollow tubes that subsequently fill in 
     with silica.
5. Eye Agates
     This mysterious agate characteristic is believed to be formed when most of the silica gel drains from the 
     cavity, leaving only a droplet that “beads up” on the inside wall of the cavity. This droplet crystallizes into 
     solid chalcedony “eyes”. In some cases, crystal growth will continue from this droplet in a manner similar 
      to the formation of stalactites in caves. Later, the pocket fills in with the usual deposition of chalcedony 
      microcrystals.
6. Plume Agate
    These agates initially had formations on their outside layer that formed prior to the deposition of 
     chalcedony bands. They are filament growths of mineral inclusions that resemble ferns or feathers.
7. Geode Agate
    Geode Agate In some cases the supply of silica-rich water runs out before the entire cavity fills in. When 
    there is a hollow center within a crystalline outer fill, the specimen is considered a geode. Not all geodes 
    have agate banding, but many do. Also, the inner layers can form into several different types of silica 
    mineral crystals and may even have other types of mineral crystals.
8. Moss Agate
    Moss Agate Moss agates have clusters of mineral inclusions that resemble plants, trees, or landscapes. 
    Most moss agate inclusions are comprised of iron or manganese oxide. In some cases, the inclusions 
    inhibit chalcedony banding allowing the mineral clusters free reign to grow within the silica gel.
9. Seam Agate
    Seam agates for in cracks within host rock, rather than in rounder pockets. The bands form in parallel 
    rows that follow and fill in the crack or seam.

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