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The Chemistry, Properties and Tests of Precious Stones Part 5

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YELLOW STONES.

_Hardness._ _Specific Gravity._ (See Chapter VII.) (See Chapter VIII.) Amber 2-1/2 1.000 Beryl 7-3/4 2.709-2.810 Chrysoberyl 8-1/2 3.689-3.752 Chrysolite 6-7 3.316-3.528 Corundum (the yellow variety known as "Oriental Topaz" [not "Topaz"], see below) 9 3.90-4.16 Diamond 10 3.502-3.564 Garnets (various) 6-1/2-7-1/2 3.4-4.5 Hyacinth (a form of Zircon) 7-1/2 4.7-4.88 Quartz (Citrine) 7 2.658 Sapphire 9 4.049-4.060 Spinel 8 3.614-3.654 Topaz (for "Oriental Topaz," see above) 8 3.500-3.520 Tourmaline 7-1/4 3.210

BROWN AND FLAME-COLOURED STONES.

_Hardness._ _Specific Gravity._ (See Chapter VII.) (See Chapter VIII.) Andalusite 7-1/2 3.204 Diamond 10 3.502-3.564 Garnets (various) 6-1/2-7-1/2 3.40-4.50 Hyacinth (a form of Zircon), see below 7-1/2 4.70-4.88 Quartz (smoke coloured) 7 2.670 Tourmaline 7-1/4 3.100 Zircon (Hyacinth) 7-1/2 4.70-4.88

RED AND ROSE-COLOURED STONES.

_Hardness._ _Specific Gravity._ (See Chapter VII.) (See Chapter VIII.) Carnelian (a variety of Chalcedony) 6-1/2 2.598-2.610 Diamond 10 3.502-3.564 Deep Red Garnet 7-1/4 3.40-4.50 Jasper 7 2.668 Opal (the "Fire Opal") 5-1/2-6-1/2 2.21 (average) Ruby 9 4.073-4.080 Rhodonite 5-1/2-6-1/2 3.413-3.617 Sapphire 9 4.049-4.060 Spinel Ruby 8 3.614-3.654 Topaz 8 3.500-3.520 Tourmaline 7-1/4 3.024 Zircon 7-1/2 4.70-4.88

PINK STONES.

_Hardness._ _Specific Gravity._ (See Chapter VII.) (See Chapter VIII.) Beryl 7-3/4 2.709-2.810 Diamond 10 3.502-3.564 Ruby 9 4.073-4.080 Spinel 8 3.614-3.654 Topaz ("burnt" or "pinked"), see Chapter XIV., page 92 8 3.500-3.520 Tourmaline 7-1/4 3.024

BLUE STONES.

_Hardness._ _Specific Gravity._ (See Chapter VII.) (See Chapter VIII.) Beryl 7-3/4 2.709-2.810 Diamond 10 3.502-3.564 Dichorite (Water Sapphire) 7-7-1/2 4.049-4.060 Disthene (Kyanite) 5-7 3.609-3.688 Iolite (Cordierite) 7-1/4 2.641 Lapis lazuli 5-1/2 2.461 Sapphire 9 4.049-4.060 Topaz 8 3.500-3.520 Tourmaline 7-1/4 3.160 Turquoise 6 2.800

GREEN STONES.

_Hardness._ _Specific Gravity._ (See Chapter VII.) (See Chapter VIII.) Aquamarine 7-3/4 2.701-2.800 Chrysoberyl 8-1/2 3.689-3.752 Chrysolite 6-7 3.316-3.528 Chrysoprase (Quartz) 7 2.670 Diamond 10 3.502-3.564 Dioptase 5 3.289 Emerald and Oriental Emerald 7-3/4 2.690 Euclase 7-1/2 3.090 Garnet (see also Red Garnet) 6-1/2-7-1/2 3.400-4.500 Heliotrope (Chalcedony) 6-1/2 2.598-2.610 Hiddenite (a variety of Spodumene) 6-1/2-7 3.130-3.200 Jade 7 3.300-3.381 Jadeite 7 3.299 Malachite 3-1/2 3.710-3.996 Peridot (a variety of Chrysolite) 6-7 3.316-3.528 Plasma (a variety of Chalcedony) 6-1/2 2.598-2.610 Quartz 7 2.670 Sapphire 9 4.049-4.060 Topaz 8 3.500-3.520 Tourmaline 7-1/4 3.148

VIOLET STONES.

_Hardness._ _Specific Gravity._ (See Chapter VII.) (See Chapter VIII.) Amethyst 7 2.661 Diamond 10 3.502-3.564 Quartz (Amethyst) 7 2.670 Sapphire 9 4.049-4.060 Spinel 8 3.614-3.654 Tourmaline 7-1/4 3.160

CHATOYANT STONES.

These stones are easily recognisable by their play of colour. (See Chapter XIV.)

BLACK STONES.

_Hardness._ _Specific Gravity._ (See Chapter VII.) (See Chapter VIII.) Diamond 10 3.502-3.564 Garnet 6-1/2-7-1/2 3.400-4.500 Jet 3-1/2 1.348 Onyx (a variety of Chalcedony) 6-1/2 2.598-2.610 Quartz 7 2.670 Tourmaline (not unlike Black Resin in appearance) 7-1/4 3.024-3.300

CHAPTER XIII.

VARIOUS PRECIOUS STONES.

_The Diamond._

To recapitulate certain of the facts respecting the diamond.--This wonderful gem has the distinction amongst precious stones of being unique; though many are composed of two, three, or but a small number of elements, the diamond is the only stone known consisting of one element, and absolutely nothing else--pure crystallised carbon. Its hardness is proverbial; not only is it untouched by the action of a hard file, but it occasionally refuses to split when struck with finely tempered steel, which it often causes to break. Such was the case with the South African diamond, for when the knife that was to break it was struck smartly with a steel bar, the first blow broke the blade without affecting the diamond, yet a piece of bort, or diamond dust, splinters, or defective diamonds (all these being called bort), may readily be pulverised in a hard steel mortar with a hard steel pestle.

The diamond is the hardest stone known; it is also the only stone known which is really combustible. It is of true adamantine l.u.s.tre, cla.s.sed by experts as midway between the truly metallic and the purely resinous. In refractive power and dispersion of the coloured rays of light, called its fire, it stands pre-eminent. It possesses a considerable variety of colour; that regarded as the most perfect and rare is the blue-white colour. Most commonly, however, the colours are clear, with steely-blue casts, pale and neutral-colour yellow, whilst amongst the most expensive and rare are those of green, pale pink, red, and any other variety with strong and decided colour. Although these stones are sold by the carat, there can be no hard and fast rule laid down as to the value of a carat, for this depends on the size, quality, and the purity of the stone. The larger the stone the greater the value per carat, and prices have been known to range from 25_l._ per carat for a small stone to 500_l._ per carat for a large one, whereas the exceptionally large stones possess a value almost beyond estimation.

It often happens that some stones--particularly those from South Africa and Brazil--are tinted when uncut, probably by reason of the action upon them of their matrix, especially if ironstone, or with rolling for ages amongst ironstone in river-beds, which gives them a slight metallic appearance; in each case the cause is suggested by the fact that these tinted stones are usually found in such places, and that the tinting is very thin and on the surface only, so that the cutting and shaping of the stone gets below it to the perfectly clear diamond.

From Pliny and other historians we gather that at various periods considerable superst.i.tion has existed with regard to diamonds, such as that if one is powdered it becomes poisonous to a remarkable degree; that gifts of diamonds between lovers--married and unmarried--produce and seal affection; hence the popularity of diamonds in betrothal rings. Pretty as is this conceit, there is no doubt about the fact that the gift of diamonds to the object of one's affections does usually produce a feeling of pleasure to both parties, from which it would appear that there is some ground for the belief.

_Corundum._

This mineral is a species of crystal, or crystalline alumina--an almost pure anhydrous alumina, Al_{2}O_{3}--in many varieties, both of shape and colour. The chief stone is the ruby, considered, when large, to be of even more importance and value than the diamond. There are many other red stones in this group; sapphires, also, are a species of corundum, both the blue and the colourless varieties, as are also the aquamarine, the emerald, the amethyst, the topaz, and others, all of widely differing colour, as well as the star-shaped, or "aster" ruby, called the "ruby" cat's-eye. All these vary more in colour than in their chemical properties. Still another variety, greyish-black and generally a.s.sociated with haemat.i.te iron ore, is called emery, and, when ground in different degrees of fineness, is so well known by its general use as a polis.h.i.+ng medium as to need no description. It should, however, be mentioned that amongst the more coa.r.s.ely ground emery it is no uncommon thing to find minute sapphires, taking sapphires in their broad, commercial meaning, as signifying any variety of corundum, except the red and the emery. The surfaces of crystals of corundum are often clouded or dull, whilst its cla.s.sification of l.u.s.tre is vitreous. It is double refracting and has no cleavage. It is found in China, India, Burma, Ceylon, South Africa, America, and in many other places, having a wide distribution.

_The Ruby._

In the dichroscope the ruby shows two images, one square of a violet red, the second square being a truer and a paler red. It may be subjected to strong heat, when it changes its colour to a sooty or dirty slate, this varying with the locality in which the stone is found, and the manner in which the heat is applied. But as it cools it becomes paler and greener, till it slowly enrichens; the green first becomes broken, then warmer, redder, and finally a.s.sumes its original beautiful blood red. This method of heating is sometimes used as a test, but it is a test which often means the complete ruin of a stone which is not genuine. Another characteristic which, in the eyes of the expert, invariably isolates a real from an artificial ruby is its curious mild brilliance, which as yet has not been reproduced by any scientific method in paste or any other material, but perhaps the safest test of all is the crystalline structure, which identical structure appears in no other stone, though it is possible, by heating alumina coloured with oxide of iron and perhaps also a trace of oxide of chromium to a very high temperature for a considerable time, and then cooling very slowly, to obtain a ruby which is nearly the same in its structure as the real gem; its specific gravity and hardness may perhaps be to standard, and when properly cut, its brilliance would deceive all but an expert. And as in some real rubies there are found slight hollows corresponding or a.n.a.logous to the bubbles found in melted gla.s.s, it becomes a matter of great difficulty to distinguish the real from the imitation by such tests as hardness, specific gravity, dichroism, and the like, so that in such a case, short of risking the ruin of the stone, ordinary persons are unable to apply any convincing tests. Therefore, only the expert can decide, by his appreciation of the delicate shade of difference in the light of a true ruby and that of an excellent imitation, and by the distribution of the colour, which--however experienced the chemist may be, or with what care the colouring matter may have been incorporated in the ma.s.s--has been found impossible of distribution throughout the body of an artificial stone so perfectly and in the same manner and direction as nature herself distributes it in the genuine. This alone, even in the closest imitations, is clear to the eye of the expert, though not to the untrained eye, unless the stone is palpably spurious. To one who is accustomed to the examination of precious stones, however perfect the imitation, it is but necessary to place it beside or amongst one or more real ones for the false to be almost instantly identified, and that with certainty.

_The Sapphire._

The Sapphire is not so easy to imitate, as its hardness exceeds that of the ruby, and imitations containing its known const.i.tuents, or of gla.s.s, are invariably softer than the natural stone. As before remarked, almost any form of corundum other than red is, broadly, called sapphire, but giving them their strictly correct designations, we have the olivine corundum, called "chrysolite" (oriental), which is harder than the ordinary or "n.o.ble" chrysolite, sometimes called the "peridot." The various yellow varieties of corundum take the name of the "oriental topaz," which, like most, if not all, the corundum varieties, is harder than the gem which bears the same name, minus the prefix "oriental."

Then we have the "amethyst" sapphire, which varies from a red to a blue purple, being richer in colour than the ordinary amethyst, which is a form of violet-coloured quartz, but the corundum variety, which, like its companions, is called the "oriental" amethyst, is both rarer and more precious. A very rare and extremely beautiful green variety is called the oriental emerald. The oriental jacinth, or hyacinth, is a brown-red corundum, which is more stable than the ordinary hyacinth, this latter being a form of zircon; it changes colour on exposure to light, which colour is not restored by subsequent retention in darkness.

The blue sapphire is of all shades of blue, from cornflower blue to the very palest tints of this colour, all the gradations from light to dark purple blues, and, in fact, so many shades of tone and colour that they become almost as numerous as the stones. These stones are usually found in similar situations to those which produce the ruby, and often along with them. The lighter colours are usually called females, or feminine stones, whilst the darker ones are called masculine stones. Some of these dark ones are so deep as to be almost black, when they are called "ink" sapphires, and if inclining to blue, "indigo" sapphires, in contradistinction to which the palest of the stones are called "water"

sapphires. The colouring matter is not always even, but is often spread over the substance of the stone in scabs or "splotches," which rather favours imitation, and, where this unevenness occurs, it may be necessary to cut or divide the stone, or so to arrange the form of it that the finished stone shall be equally blue throughout.

In some cases, however, the sapphire may owe its beauty to the presence of two, three or more colours in separate strata appearing in one stone; such as a portion being a green-blue, another a cornflower blue, another perfectly colourless, another a pale sky blue, another yellow, each perfectly distinct, the stone being cut so as to show each colour in its full perfection.

This stone, the sapphire, is hardness No. 9 (see "Hardness" table), and therefore ranks next to the diamond, which makes it a matter of great difficulty to obtain an imitation which is of the same specific gravity and of the same degree of hardness, though this has been done. Such stones are purchasable, but though sold as imitations at comparatively low price, and the buyer may consider them just as good as the real gem, to the experienced eye they are readily detectable.

By heating a sapphire its blue colour slowly fades, to complete transparency in many cases, or at any rate to so pale a tint as to pa.s.s for a transparent stone. Valuable as is the sapphire, the diamond is more so, and it follows that if one of these clear or "cleared"

sapphires is cut in the "rose" or "brilliant" form--which forms are reserved almost exclusively for the diamond--such a stone would pa.s.s very well as a diamond, and many so cut are sold by unscrupulous people as the more valuable stone, which fraud an expert would, of course, detect.

Sapphires are mentioned by Pliny, and figure largely in the ancient history of China, Egypt, Rome, etc. The Greeks dedicated the sapphire specially to Jupiter, and many of the stones were cut to represent the G.o.d; it also figured as one of the chief stones worn by the Jewish High Priest on the breast-plate. Some stones have curious rays of variegated colour, due to their crystalline formation, taking the shape of a star; these are called "asteriated," or "cat's eye" sapphires. Others have curious flashes of light, technically called a "play" of light (as described in Chapter VI. on "Colour"), together with a curious blue opalescence; these are the "girasol." Another interesting variety of this blue sapphire is one known as "chatoyant"; this has a rapidly changing l.u.s.tre, which seems to undulate between a green-yellow and a luminous blue, with a phosph.o.r.escent glow, or fire, something like that seen in the eyes of a cat in the dark, or the steady, burning glow observed when the cat is fascinating a bird--hence its name. This is not the same variety as the "asteriated," or "cat's eye" or "lynx eye"

mentioned above.

CHAPTER XIV.

VARIOUS PRECIOUS STONES--_continued._

_The Chrysoberyl._

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