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OCCURRENCE OF GEMS
It was the opinion of the ancients that gems were largely confined in their occurrence to tropical countries. Most gems which they knew were so obtained, India being the chief source of them. Their wise men reasoned, therefore, that the warmth and light of the sun of the tropical zone were needed to give gems that fire and brilliancy which made them precious among stones. With the wider knowledge of the earth which has been gained in later times, however, it has become evi­dent that climatic conditions have little or nothing to do with the occurrence of gems. The greater oxidation produced by the heat of the sun in the tropics may add to the warmth of color of such stones as the carnelian and agate, but it would have a tendency to fade the amethyst and sapphire. A greater abundance of gems in the tropics may arise from more extensive decomposition of the rocks there, and this is undoubtedly a favorable circumstance. Moreover, glaciated coun­tries, such as the northeastern portion of North America, have a soil composed of too heterogeneous a mixture to favor the search for gems. So far as the underlying rock is concerned, however, there is not, so far as we know at present, any distribution by latitudes which favors one locality over another. Hence the mountain fastnesses of the Urals furnish gems no less than the broad valleys of India, the bleak shores of Labrador as well as the steaming jungles of Burmah, and the barren veldt of the Transvaal as well as the thickly settled valleys of Bohemia.
The first discovery of gems in a region is usually made, like that of gold, in the beds of streams. Often it is in the search for gold that gems are found, as is illustrated by the fact that the discoveries of diamonds in Brazil, sapphires in Montana, and rubies in North Carolina were made in this manner.
The frequent occurrence of gems in the beds of streams is due to the fact that the gem minerals are usually harder and less easily decom­posed than the other minerals of the rocks in which they were formed. Hence they remain after the mother rock has disintegrated and its con­stituents for the most part removed. The discovery of gems in a stream bed is further facilitated by the enhancing of their color when wet,
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