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the objects are found to be coated with a pearly substance. Pearls so formed, however, are comparatively dark and lusterless, and have by no means the value of those of wholly natural origin.
Pearls vary in size from those of microscopic dimensions to those as large as a pigeon's egg. The latter are, of course, very rare.
The Shah of Persia is said to possess the largest pearl known, it being about one and one-third inches in length in one direction and one inch in another. A pearl in the Austrian crown weighs 300 carats, and one in the South Kensington Museum weighs 455 carats. The small pearls used in jewelry are known as seed, dust, or sand pearls.
Pearls are chiefly white in color, but many are tinted yellow or pink; some are gray, green, or purple, and many other colors occur. Black pearls are obtained in certain fisheries. The pearls from the Unios of North America are of almost every shade.
Pearls of pure white color, if of the proper luster, are those most highly prized in Europe and America, although a slight pinkish tinge does not injure the value. They must, however, have the transparency of the true pearl and not be "chalky." In China and India pearls of yellow color are preferred.
The hardness of pearl is 4, and its specific gravity 2.65-2.68. It is thus like that of shell or " mother of pearl," which might be expected from the fact that both are of the same chemical composition—carbonate of lime. Owing to their low hardness pearls are easily scratched, and on account of their composition are attacked by acids. They thus deterio­rate with age, losing their polish and luster and often becoming black and unsightly. No way of positively restoring the luster of pearls is known, although occasionally the outer marred coating can be removed by those skilled in the art, and a lustrous surface be found beneath.
The Ceylonese are accustomed to feed pearls which have become dull to chickens. After the pearl has remained in the crop of the bird a few hours the fowl is killed and the pearl removed. The movement and friction to which the pearl has been subjected in the bird's crop are usually found to have restored its luster to some extent.
To preserve pearls as long as possible they should be wiped with a clean linen cloth each time after being worn, and be kept in a dust-tight box carefully wrapped in linen. Hot or boiling water injures and in time destroys their luster, and many valuable pearls have been ruined because the mollusk which contained them was boiled before opening.
The mollusks which yield pearls are many, and pearl-fishing is an industry carried on in many parts of the globe.
The pearl mollusk or pearl oyster, par excellence, is that known by
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