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- Q5349289 subject Q7288667.
- Q5349289 subject Q8760047.
- Q5349289 subject Q8818467.
- Q5349289 abstract "Eilat Stone derives its name from the city of Eilat where it was once mined, it is a green-blue inhomogeneous mixture of several secondary copper minerals including malachite, azurite, turquoise, pseudomalachite, chrysocolla. The Eilat stone is the National stone of Israel, and is also known as the King Solomon Stone.The blue and green stones sold in tourist souvenir shops are generally imported from foreign copper mines, and are not really from Israel.".
- Q5349289 thumbnail Eilat_Stone_Jewel.jpg?width=300.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q108212.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q134762.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q164411.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q165254.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q2479376.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q37085.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q407485.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q7288667.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q801.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q8760047.
- Q5349289 wikiPageWikiLink Q8818467.
- Q5349289 comment "Eilat Stone derives its name from the city of Eilat where it was once mined, it is a green-blue inhomogeneous mixture of several secondary copper minerals including malachite, azurite, turquoise, pseudomalachite, chrysocolla. The Eilat stone is the National stone of Israel, and is also known as the King Solomon Stone.The blue and green stones sold in tourist souvenir shops are generally imported from foreign copper mines, and are not really from Israel.".
- Q5349289 label "Eilat stone".
- Q5349289 depiction Eilat_Stone_Jewel.jpg.