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Ch. 5: Imitation Gems & Artificial Production

Ch. 5:  Imitation Gems & Artificial Production Page of 311 Ch. 6: The Diamond Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
92           '                      PRECIOUS STONES.
reliable test, however, seems to be in the destruction of the stone. The real Turquoise, on strongly heating in the blow­pipe flame, decrepitates violently and turns brown to black. The artificial production under the same treatment fuses quietly to a black glass.
The exact method of their preparation is not known, but seems to consist in applying great pressure to small quantites of powder having the composition of Turquoise (hydrous pbosphate of alumina with a trace of copper oxide); the powder is chemically precipitated, and is in a very fine state of division. The stones produced by this method are all small, no large ones having been detected.
"With increase of knowledge, as each branch of science grows, we may yet live to see the day when Diamonds will be made on the " while you wait " system. In these days of scientific marvels, one wonders, not at what has been done or what is likely to be accomplished in the future, but what will be left undone. In point of fact, we have almost ceased wondering at all.
The more scientific methods of identification have been mentioned elsewhere, so no mention has been made in this chapter of specific gravity solutions, refractometers, or the colouring effects of radium or the Rontgen rays upon the Diamond and Sapphire.
Ch. 5:  Imitation Gems & Artificial Production Page of 311 Ch. 6: The Diamond
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