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Home > Jewelry (View-All) > 302947-3 Yellow gold, tourmaline and sparkling diamonds in a unique ladies ring that WILL light up the room!
302947-3 Yellow gold, tourmaline and sparkling diamonds in a unique ladies ring that WILL light up the room!
302947-3 Yellow gold, tourmaline and sparkling diamonds in a unique ladies ring that WILL light up the room! Yellow gold (6.10g) with tourmaline with sparkling diamond accents. Only $1,299.99

About
Tourmaline-
Tourmaline has a
variety of colors. Usually, iron-rich tourmalines are black to bluish-black to
deep brown, while magnesium-rich varieties are brown to yellow, and
lithium-rich tourmalines are almost any color: blue, green, red, yellow, pink,
etc. Rarely, it is colorless. Bi-colored and multicolored crystals are common,
reflecting variations of fluid chemistry during crystallization. Crystals may
be green at one end and pink at the other, or green on the outside and pink
inside; this type is called watermelon tourmaline. Some forms of tourmaline are
dichroic, in that they change color when viewed from different directions.
Physics explains
color in terms of the wavelength of radiation. A spectrograph that only
identifies the position of spectral lines will perfectly differentiate between
a radiation at 0.530 μm and another at 0.532 μm, where our eyes will only
perceive the same green.
Gem and specimen
tourmaline is mined chiefly in Brazil and Africa. Some placer material suitable
for gem use comes from Sri Lanka. In addition to Brazil, tourmaline is mined in
Tanzania, Nigeria, Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, Namibia, Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Sri Lanka, and Malawi.
United States
Some fine gems
and specimen material has been produced in the United States, with the first
discoveries in 1822, in the state of Maine. California became a large producer
of tourmaline in the early 1900s. The Maine deposits tend to produce crystals
in raspberry pink-red as well as minty greens. The California deposits are
known for bright pinks, as well as bicolors. During the early 1900s, Maine and
California were the world's largest producers of gem tourmalines. The Empress
Dowager Tz'u Hsi of China loved pink tourmaline and bought large quantities for
gemstones and carvings from the then new Himalaya Mine, located in San Diego
County, California.[9] It is not clear when the first tourmaline was found in
California. Native Americans have used pink and green tourmaline as funeral
gifts for centuries. The first documented case was in 1890 when Charles Russel
Orcutt found pink tourmaline at what later became the Stewart Mine at Pala, San
Diego.[10]
Brazil
Watermelon
Tourmaline mineral on quartz matrix (crystal approximately 2 cm wide at face)
Almost every color of tourmaline can be found in Brazil, especially in the
Brazilian states of Minas Gerais and Bahia. In 1989, miners discovered a unique
and brightly colored variety of tourmaline in the state of Paraíba. The new
type of tourmaline, which soon became known as paraiba tourmaline, came in
unusually vivid blues and greens. These colors were often described as
"neon" since they appeared to glow. Brazilian paraiba tourmaline is
usually heavily included. Much of the paraiba tourmaline from Brazil actually
comes from the neighboring state of Rio Grande do Norte. Material from Rio
Grande do Norte is often somewhat less intense in color, but many fine gems are
found there. It was determined that the element copper was important in the
coloration of the stone.
Africa
In the late
1990s, copper-containing tourmaline was found in Nigeria. The material was
generally paler and less saturated than the Brazilian materials, although the
material generally was much less included. A more recent African discovery from
Mozambique has also produced beautiful tourmaline colored by copper, similar to
the Brazilian paraiba. While its colors are somewhat less bright than top
Brazilian material, Mozambique paraiba is often less included and has been
found in larger sizes. The Mozambique paraiba material usually is more
intensely colored than the Nigerian. There is a significant overlap in color
and clarity with Mozambique paraiba and Brazilian paraiba, especially with the
material from Rio Grande do Norte. While less expensive than top quality
Brazilian paraiba, some Mozambique material sells for well over $5,000 per
carat, which still is extremely high compared to other tourmalines.
Another highly
valuable variety is chrome tourmaline, a rare type of dravite tourmaline from
Tanzania. Chrome tourmaline is a rich green color due to the presence of
chromium atoms in the crystal; chromium also produces the green color of
emeralds. Of the standard elbaite colors, blue indicolite gems are typically
the most valuable, followed by green verdelite and pink to red
rubellite.[citation needed] There are also yellow tourmalines, sometimes known
as canary tourmaline. Zambia is rich in both red and yellow tourmaline, which
are relatively inexpensive in that country. Ironically the rarest variety,
colorless achroite, is not appreciated and is the least expensive of the
transparent tourmalines.
Afghanistan
Extra fine
indicolite (blue tourmaline) and verderite (green tourmaline) are found in the
Nuristan region (Ghazi Abad district) and Pech Valley (Pech and Chapa Dara
districts) of Kunar province. Gem-quality tourmalines are faceted (cut) from
0.50–10 gram sizes and have unusually high clarity and intense shades of color.
From Wikipedia-
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