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A large crystal of sapphire from Madagascar Photo by Rob Lavinsky |
This was found in a stream in the Blue Ridge
Mountains of Georgia
in 1883 and was purported to be a sapphire worth $50,000 by its finder who was
assured of its authenticity by two different southern jewelers. This fabulous find was also known as the Blue
Ridge Sapphire. The jewelers had arrived
at a value for the stone based on its weight of several carats. Eventually this stone was proved to be a hunk
of rolled blue-bottle glass that took coating it onto some platinum wire to
convince its finder.
This is a glaring example of how little the average person
knows about gems and it seems that fallacy more then truth is known by the
general public. One of these fallacies
is the belief that any stone that can be scratched by a file has to be
glass. Another is that is when a stone
is hit with a hammer it’s a fake. These
practices have led to the destruction of many valuable gems.
The United States
has an abundance of all types of gemstones that has never been appreciated by
the average person. In many cases these
gems have been produced as a byproduct of other mining operations where many of
them have slipped through the operation to be lost. Many of the stones that were saved were
discovered in places where gold was being washed with the miners being
attracted to a gem because it was a shiny pebble.
Gold washing was not limited to the western US, but was also
practiced in the South starting in the early 1800 with the discovery of gold in
North Carolina . It is difficult today to appreciate the size
and scope of these southern gold deposits that ran through the Piedmont
and Blue Ridge Mountains . In many cases the stream banks for miles were
covered with mine tailings.
The gold wasn’t limited to placer deposits, but many mines
were also producing lode gold. Many of
these mines were destroyed during the Civil War. Recently the Haile Mine in South
Carolina was found to have reserves of gold exceeding
3,000,000 ounces. A Canadian mining
company is in the process of reopening this mine.
Another of these wonders was a stone weighing more then nine
ounces that was discovered near Gibsonville , North
Carolina that was deemed to be a real emerald by some
local expert by some “local expert.” A
microscopic examination of this stone contained numerous small sparkles of
light that were thought to be tiny diamond crystals. This stone was eventually proved to be a
quartz crystal having long hail-like crystals of hessonite and actinolite that
also had a series of small bubbles in a stream-like pattern filled with liquid
that sparkled in the light like diamonds.
In truth the United States
has produced virtually all the precious and semi-precious stones in the
world. For the most part these stones
remain in the ground through lack of interest of outright ignorance. There is also a prevalent belief that gems
come from some far-off romantic place that it is difficult to reach from here.