BRIGHTNESS, COLOUR, AND TRANSPARENCY.

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INTRODUCTION.
7
represents the specific gravity of the gem which has been put to the proof.
It is often very useful to know the specific gravity of gems, as a means of determining their quality, and to prevent the danger of their being changed for others, similar in appearance but very different in value ; as, for instance, the diamond and the jargoon.
In the case of cut and polished gems it is therefore of great use in ascertaining the class to which they belong, without the possibility of injuring them by the otherwise necessary operation of filing.
The comparison of the specific weight of gems was, according to Emmanuel, known to, and practised by, the ancients, and certainly in the Indies, for many centuries, in order to ascertain the quality of a precious stone.
BRIGHTNESS, COLOUR, AND TRANSPARENCY.
Gems acquire more or less brightness, lively, varied colouring, and transparency, in proportion to their single or double refraction, and to the polarization of light.
The brightness of gems may be distinguished as follows :
I.   Adamantine brightness; that which gives out the splendour peculiar to the diamond.
II.   Vitreous brightness; that which resembles glass.
III.  Resinous brightness; that which shines as if the surface had been rubbed with oil.
Specfic Gravity Page of 243 BRIGHTNESS, COLOUR, AND TRANSPARENCY.
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