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Pumice

INCI

Pumice

Certification

Conventional

Appearance

Fine grade off-white to grey coarse powder

Origin

USA

Solubility

Insoluble

Usage rate

Typically used from 1 - 10%

pH range

(10% in water) 8 - 10

Vegan

Yes

Palm oil

No

Animal tested

No

IMPORTANT NOTE

Wear a face mask when working with this product


Fine, 1-1/2 grade, suitable for face and body products.

The complex geology of pumice:

Pumice stone is the end product of an amazing natural force – the volcano.
As a natural ingredient it has some unique properties including low density, lightness and abrasiveness which make it ideal in exfoliating and polishing products.

Pumice combines scientific complexity with familiarity. Most people recognise a pumice stone as a humble household object – yet delving deeper into the scientific origins of pumice open up a much more complex picture requiring at least a superficial understanding of geology.

Volcanic rock varies enormously depending on the type of eruption that created it and the source and composition of the magma erupted. The cooled discharge from volcanoes can be anything from ash to sizeable rocks with small minerals in them.

Most consumers associate pumice with comforting bath time beauty routines. The pumice stone sitting in a traditional chrome bath rack has a homely, almost reassuringly old-fashioned quality.

Some volcanic rock – like pumice – has ‘holes’ or vesicles within the rock which are caused by gas discharges during more violent eruptions. Pumiceous rock is extremely light and full of holes because it is the product of an extremely forceful volcanic eruption.
Pumice was heated to incredible temperatures during eruption and became almost completely liquid. Subsequent cooling was so rapid that there was no time for the pumice to crystallise. Rapid cooling solidified the gas dissolved within the molten mass and the frothy liquid turned to stone.
Small particles of minerals are contained in most pumices but too great a quantity of mineral deposits actually degrade the commercial quality of the pumice making it overly hard.

Pumice varies in colour according to its mineral composition. Rhyolite and trachyte pumices are white and contain 60 to 75% of silica; andesite pumices are often yellow or brown; while pumiceous basalts are pitch black when perfectly fresh.
Pumice can be formed from any type of lava given the right conditions but in reality pumice occurs most often where the lava is acidic.
High quality pumice is found in Iceland, Hungary, Nevada, Teneriffe, New Zealand, Pantellaria and the Lipari Islands.

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