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action and currents the cliffs of the shore are continually being worn down, and the lighter and finer particles borne sea-ward, while those which are heavier, either because of higher specific gravity, or of greater resistance to erosion and decomposition, and hence larger, remain behind. A continual concentration is thus going on which in time may pro­duce gem deposits of some extent. The area upon which such a depo­sition may take place is, however, relatively narrow at any one period, as compared with that afforded by streams, and hence few gems are likely to be obtained from such sources. Labradorite and hypersthene are obtained from deposits of this character upon the coast of Labrador; chlorastrolite from the shore of Isle Royale; and agate and thomsonite from beaches of Lake Superior. Hardly any other gem minerals can be mentioned as so obtained, with the exception of amber, which is gathered from the coast of the Baltic Sea. This, however, is deposited not through its heaviness but its lightness, it being borne upon the waves and tossed inland.
Passing from the gravels in which gems are found to a consideration of their original rock matrices, it may be said that rocks of the kind known as metamorphic are more commonly than any others the home of the gem minerals. Metamorphic rocks are those which have been changed by heat and pressure, or chemical agencies, from their original condition. They include crystalline limestones, quartzites, mica and hornblende schists, gneisses, eclogites, etc. The rubies of Burmah, the emeralds of the Urals, the diamonds of Brazil and the garnets of the Alps are illustrations of gems which occur in this way.
Next to metamorphic rocks those of an eruptive character afford the gem minerals in the greatest abundance. Of these the acidic rocks, i. e., those containing a relatively large quantity of silica, such as the granites, trachytes, rhyolites, and syenites, are the most prolific. The coarsely crystallized form of granite known as pegmatite is espe­cially fertile in the gem minerals. The basic eruptive rocks, i. e., those poor in silica, afford among gem minerals, chrysolite, some garnet, some corundum, vesuvianite, and a few others. They are, however, comparatively barren. The diamonds of South Africa occur in a rock seeming to be of a basic eruptive character; but whether the diamonds are of primary or secondary origin is not yet known.
Of all the great groups of rocks those of sedimentary origin furnish the fewest gems. Those which do occur in these are for the most part probably derived from older eruptive rocks. Such is believed to be the origin of the emeralds of Colombia, which are found in a bitumi­nous limestone of Cretaceous age. The opals of New South Wales, how-
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