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Ch. 1: Nature of Gems

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on account of its hardness. Quartz, one of the most abundant minerals of the earth's crust, though it has the qualities of hardness and luster suitable for a gem, can be used only in small quantity comparatively for gem purposes, since only few pieces have the desirable color and transparency.
The selection of stones which bear the qualities above mentioned for purposes of possession and ornament seems to be a taste as old as the human race itself. In the oldest Egyptian tombs are to be found necklaces containing emeralds, garnets, carnelians, and other precious stones. The history of many gems of India dates from a period so remote as to be indeterminate. The desire to obtain amber led the Phoenicians to make some of their earliest and longest voyages. Gems were wrought into the earliest ritual of the Hebrews, and allusions to them are frequent throughout their Scriptures. The ancient Arabs were familiar with many of the gems used at the present day, and ascribed to them special qualities. The Persian turquois mines are known to have been worked as far back as 1300 A. D., and probably much earlier. There is frequent mention of gems by Greek writers, and the Romans, especially in the later days of the Empire, seem to have had great fondness for jewels, and to have sought them eagerly in their conquests. They used them in great variety and abundance, and carried the art of cutting and engraving them to a high degree of perfection.
Moreover, gems are wrought into the history and literature of nearly all peoples, and furnish standards of color, hardness, luster, etc., which pass current the world over. Such terms as the "emerald meadow," "turquois sky," "adamantine hardness," etc., are derived from the use of gems, and have universal significance. Advances in civilization seem to increase rather than diminish the number of minerals used as gems, the number now employed being larger than ever before in the world's history.
While it is true that the qualities which have been prized in gems, and the relative esteem in which they have been held, seem to have been much the same in all ages, the fashion in gems may vary from time to time, so that now one stone and now another may take on temporarily a higher value. Yet, on the whole, their worth varies little among different peoples and at different times. The principal exception to this rule is found in the valuation of jade by the Chinese, for they esteem this above all other precious stones. Aside from a few such exceptions, gems pass current in nearly all countries at about the same value. They hence afford to a certain extent a medium of exchange, and are often made objects of investment, because they are small, portable, and have
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Ch. 1: Nature of Gems Page of 252 Ch. 1: Nature of Gems
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