Know Your Aquamarine
by Erum
With a name that literally means sea water, the most acceptable color for this stone is a clear transparent sky-blue. Much Aquamarine has a bluish-green color, and the color is caused due to the presence of iron unlike emerald in which chromium is the coloring agent.
Aquamarine
Placing a spotlight on the immensely
popular member of the
Beryl family-
Aquamarine we delve into the
beautiful depths of this gemstone.
With a name that literally means sea
water, the most acceptable color for
this stone is a clear transparent
sky-blue. Much Aquamarine has a
bluish-green color, and the color is
caused due to the presence of iron
unlike emerald in which chromium is
the coloring agent.
Other varieties of the mineral beryl
are the hugely popular emerald, the
pink to peach-pink variety
morganite
named after the American banker JP
Morgan who is also an enthusiastic
gemstone collector and the colorless
goshenite. There is also a yellow
variety of beryl known as 'heliodor'
(a name derived from the Greek words
meaning sun and gift) that occurs in
a wonderfully rich golden-yellow
color.
Occurrence
Many Brazilian states provide large
quantities of good quality beryls
including aquamarine and other
colored beryls, the most famous
amongst them being Minas Gerais.
Small, deep blue aquamarine is also
found in localities in the African
nations of Kenya, Nigeria, Zimbabwe
and Zambia.
The Ural mountains, Madagascar,
scattered localities in the US,
Namibia and Burma (Myanmar) are also
some other places where gem quality
aquamarine is mined.
Aquamarine is found in pegmatites as
well as water-worn pebbles. Unlike
emeralds the stones are found in
large crystals of flawless clarity
from which large clear stones can be
cut. Cut aquamarines need to be of
some considerable size for the color
to be sufficiently intense to
produce a good colored stone.
Treatment
As mentioned above aquamarines need
to be of a considerably large size
for the color to be sufficiently
intense, most blue aquamarine
encountered in the market today is
the result of heat treatment on
greenish-yellow or brownish-yellow
stones. The blue color is induced by
heating to a temperature between 250
and 720 degree Celsius for varying
time periods. The resultant color is
permanent.
Care
Aquamarine like emerald has a
tendency to brittleness, therefore
care should be taken while handling
the stone and setting it in jewelry.
Identification
Aquamarine exhibits distinct
Pleochroism. When viewed through a
dichroscope 'twin colors' can be
observed. These colors are deep blue
and colorless and their strength
depends on the depth of color of the
stone. Aquamarine can be easily
picked out of a parcel of similar
looking stones by viewing them
together through a
Chelsea Color
filter. The aquamarine will appear a
strong greenish-blue under the
filter.
Simulants
The most convincing imitation is
offered by synthetic spinel colored
pale blue by cobalt. However these
stones have an entirely different
refractive index (1.72) and specific
gravity (3.63) from those of
aquamarine (RI: 1.57 to 1.58, SG:
2.65 to 2.8). The quickest and
easiest test for a busy jeweler in
this case is to place the suspected
stone close to a strong light and
view it through a Chelsea color
filter held close to the eye. The
synthetic spinel will show a
distinct red under it whereas an
aquamarine would show green.
Imitations in pale blue glass are
sometimes deceptive to the eye but
are easily distinguished by the
characteristic inclusions of glass-
gas bubbles, swirls and mold marks.
Also on a Refractometer a glass gem
will show a single shadow edge as
glass is isotropic.
The only natural stone closely
resembling aquamarine is blue topaz,
which gives
Refractometer readings
of 1.610 and 1.620 as compared to
the 1.57 and 1.58 which are the more
common readings for aquamarine.
Inclusions
Although generally inclusion free
and eye-clean, aquamarine has
characteristic inclusions that
appear as hollow tubes- known as
rain.
Trivia
Chelsea Color Filter (CCF)
The Chelsea Color Filter was
originally developed in the
laboratory of the London Chamber of
Commerce in 1934 and subsequently
marketed by the Gemological
Association.
Through this filter a typical
emerald of good commercial quality
will appear red. All green pastes,
most soude emeralds, green sapphire
and most tourmalines will show no
red through the filter.
Blue gems in which cobalt is the
coloring agent also appear red
through the CCF. Hence synthetic
blue spinel, blue cobalt glass, or a
doublet with a blue cobalt glass
base all appear red or an
orange-brown color (in case of the
spinel).
A word of caution though; natural
blue spinel can appear reddish
through the filter and so can a Sri
Lankan sapphire containing a touch
of chromium as the coloring agent.
Some Common Reactions Under
Chelsea Color Filter
Refractometer
One test to determine a gem's
identity is to measure the
refraction of light in the gem.
Every material has a critical angle,
at which point light is reflected
back internally. This can be
measured using a Refractometer and
thus a gem's identity could be
ascertained.
A gemological Refractometer is a
device that projects the rays of
light reflected from a gemstone onto
a scale. This scale can be seen
through the eyepiece of the
instrument to be partly in shadow
and partly brightly illuminated. The
position of the shadow edge enables
one to read the refractive index of
the gemstone and also measure its
birefringence.