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88                       GARNETS
The garnet most valued as a gem is termed almandite, and is of a rich cherry, claret, or blood-red color. These stones were first mined near the city of Alabanda, in Asia Minor, and the same source was much exploited by the Romans in their day. The stones are still known as Syrian garnets. This same mineral occurs in large quantities near the mouth of the Stickeen River, Alaska, but is not of sifficient trans­parency to be greatly used as a gem.
Another variety, and probably the most numerous one of the garnet mineral, is known as pyrope. It does not vary much in color from almandite. The mineral is almost always found in eruptive or volcanic rocks, and is a constituent of the diamond-bearing blueground of South Africa. From this fact the finer specimens of the gem are termed in the trade cape rubies.
The home of the pyrope is, however, Bohemia. Although the stones were known in this region for centuries it was not until after Karlsbad had become an international center that interest was taken in the scientific mining and polishing of the gems. Since then the fame of these garnets and their usefulness in the arts when not of sufficient fineness for jewels has led to a thorough exploitation of the field, and Bohemia