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Ch. 11: Beautiful Blonde Emeralds

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The Beautiful Blonde Liked Emeralds 111
this in itself is sufficient to assign the emerald to third place. And if you consider beauty and rarity, it is second to none.
The emerald is a variety of beryl. All beryls have the approximate hardness of 8, but they vary somewhat, some being much softer than others. Both the aquamarine and the euclase belong to this family of stones. But whereas the aquamarine, as its name reveals, is sea-green and the euclase varies from yellow to something like sea-green, due to the presence of small quantities of oxide of iron, the colour of the emerald is a bright lustrous green, de­rived from its chromium content.
Speaking historically, emeralds were already being mined in Upper Egypt in 1650 b.c., and the Greeks, in the days of Alexander the Great, were still tapping the same source of supply. Cleopatra, extravagant queen and lover of the exquisite, revelled in the emeralds of Egypt, and some of her most famous gems were dug from Egyptian soil.
The name for emerald in many languages is a mispro­nunciation of the Arab "Zummurud". Spanish "Esmer­alda", French "Emeraade", German "Smargd", English "Emerald", are all lovely variations on a name that is pure music. Emeralds have been loved and prized through­out medieval and modern times as much as in the ancient days, but it was only in 1817 that a Frenchman named Caillioud rediscovered the remains of the extensive emer­ald workings of Egypt in Northern Etbai. Cleopatra's mines are located in Jebel Sikait and Jebel Zabara, near the Red Sea coast east of Aswan, and the emerald crystals found there were embedded in mica and talc schists. In
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