Tourmaline
belongs to the trigonal crystal system and occurs as long, slender to
thick prismatic and columnar crystals that are usually triangular in
cross-section. Interestingly, the style of termination at the ends of
crystals is asymmetrical, called hemimorphism. Small slender prismatic
crystals are common in a fine-grained granite called aplite, often forming
radial daisy-like patterns. Tourmaline is distinguished by its three-sided
prisms; no other common mineral has three sides. Prisms faces often
have heavy vertical striations that produce a rounded triangular effect.
Tourmaline is rarely perfectly euhedral. An exception was the fine dravite
tourmalines of Yinnietharra, in western Australia. The deposit was discovered
in the 1970s, but is now exhausted.
All hemimorphic crystals are piezoelectric, and are often pyroelectric as well. Tourmaline crystals when warmed become positively charged at one end and negatively charged at the other. Due to this effect, tourmaline crystals in collections may attract unsightly coatings of dust when displayed under hot spotlights. Tourmaline's unusual electrical properties made it famous in the early 18th century. Brightly colored Sri Lankan gem tourmalines were brought to Europe in great quantities by the Dutch East India Company to satisfy a demand for curiosities and gems. At the time it was not realised that schorl and tourmaline were the same mineral.
Tourmaline
has a wide variety of colors. Usually, iron-rich tourmalines are black
to bluish-black to deep brown, while magnesium-rich varieties are brown
to yellow, and lithium-rich tourmalines are practically any color: blue,
green, red, yellow, pink etc. Rarely, it is colorless. Bi-colored and
multicolored crystals are relatively common, reflecting variations of
fluid chemistry during crystallisation. Crystals may be green at one
end and pink at the other, or green on the outside and pink inside:
this type is called watermelon tourmaline. Some forms of tourmaline
are dichroic, in that they appear to change color when viewed from different
directions.
The most common variety of tourmaline is schorl. It may account for 95% or more of all tourmaline in nature. The early history of the mineral schorl shows that the name "Schorl" was in use prior to the year 1400 (AD) because a village known today as Zschorlau (in Saxony, Germany) was then named "Schorl" (or minor variants of this name). This village had a nearby tin mine where, in addition to cassiterite, a lot of black tourmaline was found. The first relatively detailed description of schorl with the name "schürl" and its occurrence (various tin mines in the Saxony Ore Mountains) was written by Johannes Mathesius (1504-1565) in 1562 under the title "Sarepta oder Bergpostill" (Ertl, 2006). Up to about 1600, additional names used in the German language were "Schurel", "Schörle", and "Schurl". From the 18th century on, the name "Schörl" was mainly used in the German-speaking area. In English, the names "shorl" and "shirl" were used in the 18th century for schorl. In the 19th century the names "common schorl", "schörl", "schorl" and "iron tourmaline" were used in the Anglo-Saxon area (Ertl, 2006). The word tourmaline has two entymologies, both from the Sinhalese word turamali, meaning "stone attracting ash" (a reference to its pyroelectric properties) or according to other sources "mixed gemstones". The meaning of the word "schorl" is a mystery, but it may be a Scandinavian word.
The name dravite was used for the first time by Gustav Tschermak (*1836 - †1927; Professor of mineralogy and petrography at the University of Vienna) in his book “Lehrbuch der Mineralogie” (published in 1884) for Mg-rich (and Na-rich) tourmaline from the village Unterdrauburg, Drava river area, Carinthia, Austro-Hungarian Empire. Today this tourmaline locality (type locality for dravite) at the village Dravograd (near Dobrova pri Dravogradu), is a part of the Republic of Slovenia (Ertl, 2007). Tschermak gave this tourmaline the name dravite, for the Drava river area, which is the district along the Drava River (in German: Drau, in Latin: Drave) in Austria and Slovenia. The chemical composition which was given by Tschermak in 1884 for this dravite approximately corresponds to the formula NaMg3(Al,Mg)6B3Si6O27(OH), which is in good agreement (except for the OH content) with the endmember formula of dravite as known today (Ertl, 2007).
Tourmaline
is found in two main geological occurrences. Igneous rocks, in particular
granite and granite pegmatite and in metamorphic rocks such as schist
and marble. Schorl and lithium-rich tourmalines are usually found in
granite and granite pegmatite. Magnesium-rich tourmalines, dravites,
are generally restricted to schists and marble. Also, tourmaline is
a durable mineral and can be found in minor amounts as grains in sandstone
and conglomerate.
Today,
gem and specimen tourmaline is mined chiefly in Brazil and Africa.
Some placer material suitable for gem use comes from Sri Lanka. Some
fine gem and specimen material has been produced in the US, with the
first discoveries having been made in 1822, in the state of Maine.
California became a large producer of tourmaline in the early 1900s.
The Maine deposits tend to produce crystals in raspberry pink-red as
well as minty greens. The California deposits are known for bright
pinks, as well as interesting bicolors. During the early 1900s, Maine
and California were the worlds largest producers of gem tourmalines.
The Empress Dowager Tz'u Hsi, the last Empress of China, loved pink
tourmaline and bought large quantities for gemstones and carvings from
the then new Himalaya Mine, located in San Diego County, California.
Almost
every color of tourmaline can be found in Brazil, especially in the
Brazilian states of Minas Gerais and Bahia. In 1989, miners discovered
a unique and brightly colored variety of tourmaline in the state of
Paraíba. The new type of tourmaline, which soon became known
as paraiba tourmaline, came in unusually vivid blues and greens. These
colors were often described as "neon" since they appeared
to glow. Brazilian paraiba tourmaline is usually heavily included. Much
of the paraiba tourmaline from Brazil actually comes from the neighboring
state of Rio Grande do Norte. Material from
Rio
Grande do Norte is often somewhat less intense in color, but many fine
gems are found there. It was determined that the element copper was
important in the coloration of the stone. The demand and excitement
for this new material, which has fetched more than $50,000 per carat,
earned more respect for the other colors of tourmaline. In the late
90s, copper-containing tourmaline was found in Nigeria. The material
was generally paler and less saturated than the Brazilian materials,
although the material generally was much less included. A more recent
African discovery from Mozambique has also produced beautiful tourmaline
colored by copper, similar to the Brazilian paraiba. While its colors
are somewhat less bright than top Brazilian material, Mozambique paraiba
is often less included and has been found in larger sizes. The Mozambique
paraiba material usually is more intensely colored than the Nigerian.
There is a significant overlap in color and clarity with Mozambique
paraiba and Brazilian paraiba, especially with the material from Rio
Grande do Norte. While less expensive than top quality Brazilian paraiba,
some Mozambique material sells for well over $5,000 per carat, which
still is extremely high compared to other tourmalines.
Another unique variety that is also highly valued is chrome tourmaline, a rare type of dravite tourmaline from Tanzania which occurs in a very rich green color caused by chromium, the same element which causes the green in emerald. Of the standard Elbaite colors, generally blue indicolite gems are the most expensive, followed by green verdelite and pink to red rubellite. There are also yellow tourmalines, sometimes known as canary tourmaline. Ironically the rarest variety, colorless achroite, is not appreciated and is the least expensive of the transparent tourmalines. In addition to Brazil, significant amounts of tourmaline are also mined in Tanzania, Nigeria, Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, Namibia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka, and Malawi.
Some
tourmaline gems, especially pink to red colored stones, are altered
by irradiation to improve their color. Irradiation is almost impossible
to detect in tourmalines, and does not impact the value. Heavily-included
tourmalines, such as rubellite and Brazilian paraiba are sometimes clarity
enhanced, which must be disclosed to the buyer. A clarity-enhanced tourmaline
(especially paraiba) is worth much less than a non-treated gem.

The
tourmaline mineral group is chemically one of the most complicated groups
of silicate minerals. It is a complex silicate of aluminium and boron,
but because of isomorphous replacement (solid solution), its composition
varies widely with sodium, calcium, iron, magnesium, lithium and other
elements entering into the structure.