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The tract of the Burma ruby mines forms the most important area for rubies and spinel in the world, and they have been found in the extensive bands or lenticles of crystalline limestone or marble. These mines were known to the Europeans from the fifteenth century. Due to the denudation of enormous quantities of rock, the gem-stones have been concentrated in pockets in the debris in mud filled cavities, and caverns such as are well known in the limestone districts. The principal workings have so far been in alluvial deposits in the valley bottoms. The gem bearing gravel is known in Mogok as byon. The byon or ruby strata is either alluvial or a rotten rock between the limestones and the tongues of granite intrusions which form little zones of pneumatolysis. The granite-limestone contact is always held favourable for the byon. The associated minerals in the byon are ruby, sapphire, spinel, chrysoberyl, tourmaline, garnet, zircon, beryl, quartz, scapolite, apatite and danburite.                     
The ruby mines are also famous for sapphires which are found like the ruby in the alluvial deposits. The Mogok valley has produced a few magnificent sapphires, though specially reputed for its rubies. It is not found in the limestone as the ruby but is found in felspathic and weathered igneous rocks and corundum syenite*.
Gem Mining
Mogok area.—Sapphire is found in the ruby mines from near Kathe, at Kyaungdwin near Kathe, from Ingaung near Gwebin and Kabaing. The majority of the finest sapphires were obtained from this area. Bernardmyo and Chaunggyi also produced some good sapphires. Sapphires also occur in hill-side or valley deposits. Sapphires attain much larger sizes than the rubies. Stones of 293 and 630 carats weight were found at Kathe in 1930 and 1932. Mogok produced » stone of 514 carats, and at Gwebin a stone of 1,000 carats in 1929. They are
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