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What is the most common beach sand color?

The tan color of most sand beaches is the result of iron oxide, which tints quartz a light brown, and feldspar, which is brown to tan in its original form.



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Olivine Sand Sand of almost exclusively olivine grains is very rare, and Papakolea is one of only four green sand beaches in the world. The others are Hornindalsvatnet in Norway, Punta Cormorant in the Galapagos Islands, and Talofofo Beach in Guam.

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Sand: A yellow-beige that is named after the colour of sand. Just as the colour of sand varies in nature, so do colours named “sand”. It is commonly used as a name for shades of beige or tan, and it is used in warm-weather clothing due to beach and desert sand's association with warm climates.

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Hyams Beach in New South Wales is considered one of the beaches with the whitest sand in the world, composed primarily of quartz. Around 120 miles south of Sydney, this striking yet touristy beach will leave you in awe of its beauty despite the crowds.

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Hyams Beach: Australia Hyams Beach in New South Wales is considered one of the beaches with the whitest sand in the world, composed primarily of quartz. Around 120 miles south of Sydney, this striking yet touristy beach will leave you in awe of its beauty despite the crowds.

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The Weddell Sea has been claimed by scientists to have the clearest waters of any ocean in the world. Described by a historian as “the most wretched and dismal region on earth”, due to the flash freezes that caught Shackleton's ship, its clarity is only belied by the sheer depth of the ocean below.

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