Great South Gems & Minerals
• Turquoise Nuggets, Stabilized • (China)
• Turquoise Nuggets,Stabilized • (China)
turquoise - turquoise specimens - Chinese Turquoise
Gorgeous blue turquoise nuggets from China. Smooth, polished
pieces. We got this material recently from a dealer of gemstone
beads that does direct importing from China. All of the pieces have
a hold through them as they were made for stringing for jewelry. Ray
bought these and says he really likes the color. These turquoise
nuggets will make great mineral specimens, or, you can string them up
for jewelry, or, cut them for cabochons.
When Ray got these in he took a nugget out into the yard and took a
hammer to it just to verify that they were indeed turquoise and not
died Howlite.
Turquoise is an opaque, blue-to-green mineral that is a hydrous
phosphate of copper and aluminum. Turquoise has a hardness of 5 to 6, just a little harder than glass. Turquoise in its finer grades is
rare and has been prized as a gem and ornamental stone for thousands of years. Due to personal preference, the natural darker blue colors
appear to be more valuable than the lighter blues and the green/blue colors. I recent times turquoise, like most other opaque gems, has
been devalued by the introduction of treatments, imitations, and synthetics onto the market, some difficult to detect even by
experts. It is a common practice to take a Howlite and die it a turquoise color and call it turquoise. There is lots of this
material on the market today.
As a secondary mineral, turquoise
forms by the action of percolating acidic aqueous solutions during
the weathering and oxidation of pre-existing minerals. For example,
the copper
may come from primary copper sulfides such as chalcopyrite or
from the secondary carbonates malachite or azurite; the aluminum
may derive from feldspar; and the phosphorus from apatite. Climate
factors appear to play an important role as turquoise is typically
found in arid regions.
Turquoise was among the first gems to be mined, and while many
historic sites have been depleted, some are still worked to this day. These are all small-scale, often seasonal operations, owing to
the limited scope and remoteness of the deposits. Most are worked by hand with little or no mechanization. However, turquoise is often
recovered as a byproduct of large-scale copper mining operations, especially in the United States. Iran has for at least 2,000 years
been source of quality turquoise. Since at least the First Dynasty, (3000 BCE) turquoise has been mined in the Sinai Peninsula and used
by the Egyptians. Pre-Columbian Native Americans mined turquoise in what is now California and New Mexico using stone tools. Turquoise
is still mined in California, New Mexico and Arizona by native American Indians and cut for beautiful Southwestern-type jewelry.
Turquoise was widely used by ancient Egyptians, the Aztecs, the
Persians, and in Mesopotamia, and in China. The gold burial mask of Tutankhamun was inlaid with turquoise, lapis lazuli, carnelian and
colored glass. For further information on turquoise go to the on-line Wikipedia page.
See also: p-M173
See also: p-M867
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