Ch. 6: Ruby

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80 A Book of Precious Stones
tern in six-sided prisms and pyramids, the crystals frequently being rough and rounded; hardness 9; brittle; specific gravity 3.9 and up­wards to 4.16; lustre adamantine to vitreous; sometimes the lustre is pearly on the basal plane; and occasionally there is exhibited a bright, opalescent, six-rayed star in the direc­tion of the vertical axis. The colour range is almost unlimited, blue corundum being sapphire. The strongly coloured varieties are pleochroic. Corundum is sometimes phosphorescent, with a rich red colour. The red-coloured corundum or ruby varies from a rose to a deep carmine, the desideratum being a " pigeon's blood " red, and the same crystal will sometimes reveal different colours. Like its brother in the noble corun­dum family, the ruby is a peer of the realm of precious stones, and second only to the throne of the sovereign diamond.
In chemistry, corundum is pure alumina, the oxide of the metal aluminum, composed of 53.2 per cent, of the metal and 46.8 per cent, of oxygen. Natural corundum is probably never chemically pure; the inclusions of foreign ele­ments, sometimes but the merest traces, impart the colour that makes the gem. When foreign matter is present in large proportion corundum
Ch. 6: Ruby Page of 451 Ch. 6: Ruby
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