Turquoise
is an opaque, blue-to-green mineral that is a hydrous phosphate of copper
and aluminium, with the chemical formula CuAl6(PO4)4(OH)8·4H2O.
It is rare and valuable in finer grades and has been prized as a gem
and ornamental stone for thousands of years owing to its unique hue.
In recent times turquoise, like most other opaque gems, has been devalued
by the introduction of treatments, imitations, and synthetics onto the
market, some difficult to detect even by experts.
The substance has been known by many names, but the word turquoise was derived around 16th century from the French language either from the word for Turkish (Turquois) or dark-blue stone (pierre turquin). This may have arisen from a misconception: turquoise does not occur in Turkey but was traded at Turkish bazaars to Venetian merchants who brought it to Europe. The colour, however, has been employed extensively in the decorative tiles adorning Turkish places of worship and homes for hundreds of years, beginning with the Seljuks, and the association quite possibly has caused the name to take root.
Even
the finest of turquoise is fracturable, reaching a maximum hardness
of just under 6, or slightly more than window glass. Characteristically
a cryptocrystalline mineral, turquoise almost never forms single crystals
and all of its properties are highly variable. Its crystal system is
proven to be triclinic via X-ray diffraction testing. With lower hardness
comes lower specific gravity (high 2.90, low 2.60) and greater porosity:
These
properties are dependent on grain size. The lustre of turquoise is typically
waxy to subvitreous, and transparency is usually opaque, but may be
semitranslucent in thin sections. Colour is as variable as the mineral's
other properties, ranging from white to a powder blue to a sky blue,
and from a blue-green to a yellowish green. The blue is attributed to
idiochromatic copper while the green may be the result of either iron
impurities (replacing aluminium) or dehydration.
The
refractive index (as measured by sodium light, 589.3 nm) of turquoise
is approximately 1.61 or 1.62; this is a mean value seen as a single
reading on a gemmological refractometer, owing to the almost invariably
polycrystalline nature of turquoise. A reading of 1.61–1.65 (birefringence
0.040, biaxial positive) has been taken from rare single crystals. An
absorption spectrum may also be obtained with a hand-held spectroscope,
revealing a line at 432 nanometres and a weak band at 460 nanometres
(this is
best
seen with strong reflected light). Under longwave ultraviolet light,
turquoise may occasionally fluoresce green, yellow or bright blue; it
is inert under shortwave ultraviolet and X-rays.
Turquoise is infusible in all but heated hydrochloric acid. Its streak is a pale bluish white and its fracture is conchoidal, leaving a waxy lustre. Despite its low hardness relative to other gems, turquoise takes a good polish. Turquoise may also be peppered with flecks of pyrite or interspersed with dark, spidery limonite veining.
As
a secondary mineral, turquoise apparently forms by the action of percolating
acidic aqueous solutions during the weathering and oxidation of pre-existing
minerals. For example, the copper may come from primary copper sulfides
such as chalcopyrite or from the secondary carbonates malachite or azurite;
the aluminium may derive from feldspar; and the phosphorus from apatite.
Climate factors appear to play an important role as turquoise is typically
found in arid regions, filling or encrusting cavities and fractures
in typically highly altered volcanic rocks, often with associated limonite
and other iron oxides. I
n
the American southwest turquoise is almost invariably associated with
the weathering products of copper sulfide deposits in or around potassium
feldspar bearing porphyritic intrusives. In some occurrences alunite,
potassium aluminium sulfate, is a prominent secondary mineral. Typically
turquoise mineralization is restricted to a relatively shallow depth
of less than 20m, although it does occur along deeper fracture zones
where secondary solutions have greater penetration or the depth to the
water table is greater.
Although
the features of turquoise occurrences are consistent with a secondary
or supergene origin, some sources refer to a hypogene origin. The hypogene
hypothesis, which holds that the aqueous solutions originate at significant
depth, from hydrothermal processes. Initially at high temperature, these
solutions rise upward to surface layers, interacting with and leaching
essential elements from pre-existing minerals in the process. As the
solutions cool, turquoise precipitates, lining cavities and fractures
within the surrounding rock. This hypogene process is applicable to
the original copper sulfide deposition; however, it is
difficult to account for the many features of turquoise occurrences
by a hypogene process. That said, there are reports of two phase fluid
inclusions within turquoise grains that give elevated homogenization
temperatures of 90 to 190 oC that require explanation.
Turquoise
is nearly always cryptocrystalline and massive and assumes no definite
external shape. Crystals, even at the microscopic scale, are exceedingly
rare. Typically the form is vein or fracture filling, nodular, or botryoidal
in habit. Stalactite forms have been reported. Turquoise may also pseudomorphously
replace feldspar, apatite, other minerals, or even fossils. Odontolite
is fossil bone or ivory that has been traditionally thought to have
been altered by turquoise or similar phosphate minerals such as the
iron phosphate vivianite.
Intergrowth
with other secondary copper minerals such as chrysocolla is also common.
Occurrence
Massive turquoise in matrix with quartz from Mineral Park, Arizona.Turquoise
was among the first gems to be mined, and while many historic sites
have been depleted, some are still worked to this day. These are all
small-scale, often seasonal operations, owing to the limited scope and
remoteness of the deposits. Most are worked by hand with little or no
mechanization. However, turquoise is often recovered as a byproduct
of large-scale copper mining operations, especially in the United States.
Iran
For at least 2,000 years, the region once known as Persia, has remained
the most important source of turquoise, for it is here that fine material
is most consistently recovered. This "perfect colour" deposit,
which is blue naturally, turns green when heated because getting dehyrated
is restricted to a mine-riddled in Neyshabur,[5][6][7] the 2,012-metre
mountain peak of Ali-mersai, which is tens of kilometers from Mashhad,
the capital of Khorasan province, Iran. A weathered and broken trachyte
is host to the turquoise, which is found both in situ between layers
of limonite and sandstone, and amongst the scree at the mountain's base.
These workings, together with those of the Sinai Peninsula, are the
oldest known.
Iranian turquoise is often found replacing feldspar. Although it is commonly marred by whitish patches, its colour and hardness are considered superior to the production of other localities. Iranian turquoise has been mined and traded abroad for centuries, and was probably the source of the first material to reach Europe.
Sinai
Since at least the First Dynasty (3000 BCE), and possibly before then,
turquoise was used by the Egyptians and was mined by them in the Sinai
Peninsula, called "Country of Turquoise" by the native Monitu.
There are six mines in the region, all on the southwest coast of the
peninsula, covering an area of some 650 km². The two most important
of these mines, from a historic perspective, are Serabit el-Khadim and
Wadi Maghareh, believed to be among the oldest of known mines. The former
mine is situated about 4 kilometres from an ancient temple dedicated
to Hathor.
The turquoise is found in sandstone that is, or was originally, overlain by basalt. Copper and iron workings are present in the area. Large-scale turquoise mining is not profitable today, but the deposits are sporadically quarried by Bedouin peoples using homemade gunpowder. In the rainy winter months, miners face a risk from flash flooding; even in the dry season, death from the collapse of the haphazardly exploited sandstone mine walls is not unheard of. The colour of Sinai material is typically greener than Iranian material, but is thought to be stable and fairly durable. Often referred to as Egyptian turquoise, Sinai material is typically the most translucent, and under magnification its surface structure is revealed to be peppered with dark blue discs not seen in material from other localities.
In
proximity to nearby Eilat, Israel, an attractive intergrowth of turquoise,
malachite, and chrysocolla is found. This rock is called Eilat stone
and is often referred to as Israel's national stone: it is worked by
local artisans for sale to tourists.
United States
A selection of Ancestral Puebloan (Anasazi) turquoise and orange argillite
inlay pieces from Chaco Canyon (dated ca. 1020–1140 CE) show the
typical colour range and mottling of American turquoise.
Bisbee turquoise commonly has a hard chocolate brown coloured matrix, and is considered some of the finest in the world.The Southwest United States is a significant source of turquoise; Arizona, California (San Bernardino, Imperial, and Inyo counties), Colorado (Conejos, El Paso, Lake, and Saguache counties), New Mexico (Eddy, Grant, Otero, and Santa Fe counties) and Nevada (Clark, Elko, Esmerelda County, Eureka, Lander, Mineral County and Nye counties) are (or were) especially rich. The deposits of California and New Mexico were mined by pre-Columbian Native Americans using stone tools, some local and some from as far away as central Mexico. Cerrillos, New Mexico is thought to be the location of the oldest mines; prior to the 1920s, the state was the country's largest producer; it is more or less exhausted today. Only one mine in California, located at Apache Canyon, operates at a commercial capacity today.
The turquoise occurs as vein or seam fillings, and as compact nuggets; these are mostly small in size. While quite fine material—rivalling Iranian material in both colour and durability—is sometimes found, most American turquoise is of a low grade (called "chalk turquoise"); high iron levels mean greens and yellows predominate, and a typically friable consistency precludes use in jewelery in the turquoise's untreated state. Arizona is currently the most important producer of turquoise by value, with the vivid Bisbee Blue being a good example of the state's natural endowment; much of the Arizona material is recovered as a byproduct of copper mining.
Nevada
is the country's other major producer, with more than 120 mines which
have yielded significant quantities of turquoise. Unlike elsewhere in
the US, most Nevada mines have been worked primarily for their gem turquoise
and very little has been recovered as a byproduct of other mining operations.
Nevada turquoise is found as nuggets, fracture fillings and in breccias
as the cement filling interstices between fragments. Because of the
geology of the Nevada deposits, a majority of the material produced
is hard and dense, being of sufficient quality that no treatment or
enhancement is required. While nearly every county in the state has
yielded some turquoise, the chief producers are in Lander and Esmerelda
Counties. Most of the turquoise deposits in Nevada occur along a wide
belt of tectonic activity that coincides with the state's zone of thrust
faulting.
It strikes about N15E and extends from the northern part of Elko County,
southward down to the California border southwest of Tonopah. Nevada
has produced a wide diversity of colours and mixes of different matrix
patterns, with turquoise from Nevada coming in various shades of blue,
blue-green, and green. Nevada produces some unique shades of bright
mint to apple to neon yellow green. Some of this unusually coloured
turquoise may contain significant zinc and iron, which is the cause
of the beautiful bright green to yellow-green shades. Some of the green
to green yellow shades may actually be Variscite or Faustite, which
are secondary phosphate minerals similar in appearance to turquoise.
A significant portion of the Nevada material is also noted for its often
attractive brown or black limonite veining, producing what is called
"spiderweb matrix". While a number of the Nevada deposits
were first worked by Native Americans, the total Nevada turquoise production
since the 1870s has been an estimated at more than 600 tons, including
nearly 400 tons from the Carico Lake mine. In spite of increased costs,
small scale mining operations continue at a number of turquoise properties
in Nevada, including the Godber, Orvil Jack and Carico Lake Mines in
Lander County, the Pilot Mountain Mine in Mineral County, and several
properties in the Royston and Candelaria areas of Esmerelda County.
In 1912, the first deposit of distinct, single-crystal turquoise was discovered in Lynch Station, Campbell County, Virginia. The crystals, forming a druse over the mother rock, are very small; 1 mm (0.04 inches) is considered large. Until the 1980s Virginia was widely thought to be the only source of distinct crystals; there are now at least 27 other localities. The specimens are highly valued by collectors.
In an attempt to recoup profits and meet demand, some American turquoise is treated or enhanced to a certain degree. These treatments include innocuous waxing and more controversial procedures, such as dyeing and impregnation. There are however, some American mines which produce materials of high enough quality that no treatment or alterations are required. Any such treatments which have been performed should be disclosed to the buyer on sale of the material.
China has been a minor source of turquoise for 3,000 years or more. Gem-quality material, in the form of compact nodules, is found in the fractured, silicified limestone of Yunxian and Zhushan, Hubei province. Additionally, Marco Polo reported turquoise found in present-day Sichuan. Most Chinese material is exported, but a few carvings worked in a manner similar to jade exist. In Tibet, where green turquoise has long been appreciated, gem-quality deposits purportedly exist in the mountains of Derge and Nagari-Khorsum in the east and west of the region respectively.
Other notable localities include: Afghanistan; Australia (Victoria and Queensland); northern Chile (Chuquicamata); Cornwall; Saxony; Silesia; and Turkestan.
Trade
in turquoise crafts, such as freeform pendants dating from 1000–1040
CE, are believed to have brought the Ancestral Puebloans of the Chaco
Canyon great wealth.The pastel shades of turquoise have endeared it
to many great cultures of antiquity: it has adorned the rulers of Ancient
Egypt, the Aztecs (and possibly other Pre-Columbian Mesoamericans),
Persia, Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley, and to some extent in ancient
China since at least the Shang Dynasty.
Despite being one of the oldest gems, probably first introduced to Europe (through Turkey) with other Silk Road novelties, turquoise did not become important as an ornamental stone in the West until the 14th century, following a decline in the Roman Catholic Church's influence which allowed the use of turquoise in secular jewellery. It was apparently unknown in India until the Muhgal period, and unknown in Japan until the 18th century. A common belief shared by many of these civilizations held that turquoise possessed certain prophylactic qualities; it was thought to change colour with the wearer's health and protect him or her from untoward forces.
The
Aztecs inlaid turquoise, together with gold, quartz, malachite, jet,
jade, coral, and shells, into provocative (and presumably ceremonial)
mosaic objects such as masks
(some
with a human skull as their base), knives, and shields. Natural resins,
bitumen and wax were used to bond the turquoise to the objects' base
material; this was usually wood, but bone and shell were also used.
Like the Aztecs, the Pueblo, Navajo and Apache tribes cherished turquoise
for its amuletic use; the latter tribe believe the stone to afford the
archer dead aim. Among these peoples turquoise was used in mosaic inlay,
in sculptural works, and was fashioned into toroidal beads and freeform
pendants. The Ancestral Puebloans (Anasazi) of the Chaco Canyon and
surrounding region are believed to have prospered greatly from their
production and trading of turquoise objects. The distinctive silver
jewelry produced by the Navajo and other Southwestern Native American
tribes today is a rather modern development, thought to date from circa
1880 as a result of European influences.
In
Persia, turquoise was the de facto national stone for millennia, extensively
used to decorate objects (from turbans to bridles), mosques, and other
important buildings both inside and out, such as the Medresseh-I Shah
Husein Mosque of Isfahan. The Persian style and use of turquoise was
later brought to India following the establishment of the Mughal Empire
there, its influence seen in high purity gold jewellery (together with
ruby and diamond) and in such buildings as the Taj Mahal. Persian turquoise
was often engraved with devotional words in Arabic script which was
then inlaid with gold.
The
iconic gold burial mask of Tutankhamun, inlaid with turquoise, lapis
lazuli, carnelian and coloured glass.Cabochons of imported turquoise,
along with coral, was (and still is) used extensively in the silver
and gold jewellery of Tibet and Mongolia, where a greener hue is said
to be preferred. Most of the pieces made today, with turquoise usually
roughly polished into irregular cabochons set simply in silver, are
meant for inexpensive export to Western markets and are probably not
accurate representations of the original style.
The Egyptian use of turquoise stretches back as far as the First Dynasty and possibly earlier; however, probably the most well-known pieces incorporating the gem are those recovered from Tutankhamun's tomb, most notably the Pharaoh's iconic burial mask which was liberally inlaid with the stone. It also adorned rings and great sweeping necklaces called pectorals. Set in gold, the gem was fashioned into beads, used as inlay, and often carved in a scarab motif, accompanied by carnelian, lapis lazuli, and in later pieces, coloured glass. Turquoise, associated with the goddess Hathor, was so liked by the Ancient Egyptians that it became (arguably) the first gemstone to be imitated, the fair semblance created by an artificial glazed ceramic product known as faience. (A similar blue ceramic has been recovered from Bronze Age burial sites in the British Isles.)
The French conducted archaeological excavations of Egypt from the mid-19th century through the early 20th. These excavations, including that of Tutankhamun's tomb, created great public interest in the western world, subsequently influencing jewellery, architecture, and art of the time. Turquoise, already favoured for its pastel shades since c. 1810, was a staple of Egyptian Revival pieces. In contemporary Western use, turquoise is most often encountered cut en cabochon in silver rings, bracelets, often in the Native American style, or as tumbled or roughly hewn beads in chunky necklaces. Lesser material may be carved into fetishes, such as those crafted by the Zuni. While strong sky blues remain superior in value, mottled green and yellowish material is popular with artisans. In Western culture, turquoise is also the traditional birthstone for those born in the month of December.
In
Judeo-Christian scripture
Turquoise may have significance in Judeo-Christian scripture: In the
Book of Exodus, the construction of a "breastplate of judgment"
is described as part of the priestly vestments of Aaron (Exodus 28:15–30).
Attached to the ephod, the breastplate (Hoshen) was adorned with twelve
gemstones set in gold and arranged in four rows, each stone engraved
with the name of one of the Twelve Tribes of Israel. Of the four stones
in the third row, the first and second have been translated to be turquoise
by various scholars and English bible versions (usually not having both
as turquoise at the same time); many others disagree, however.
In regard to the first of these stones, the translation is based on the Septuagint rendering the identity of the stone as chrysolithos (the masoretic text calls it tarshish, which just refers to Tarshish, a place, and gives no clue to the gem in question); at the time it was written chrysolithos did not mean Chrysolite specifically, but only golden stone (chryso-lithos). Chrysolithos is considered by scholars to possibly mean Topaz, Chrysolite, yellow Jasper, yellow Serpentine, or Turquoise - the last of these on the basis that Turquoise contains golden flecks, and that targums identified the stone as being sea coloured. Scholars favour stones which are mostly yellow as being the more likely solution, and opaque stones (Jasper or Serpentine) as more likely than translucent ones, on the consideration of nearby stones in the Hoshen.
In regard to the second of these stones, the masoretic text calls it shoham, and the Septuagint calls it Beryllios (Beryl), though elsewhere it translates shoham as onychion (Onyx), or as smaragdos (green stone). Shoham is of uncertain meaning. Following the Septuagint, some people think the stone should be an onyx (and many more traditional English versions of the Bible take this translation), but scholars think that the stone is actually Malachite (because it is green like beryl and smaragdos, cloudy as beryl can be, and in bands like onyx).Scholars also disagree as to which tribes of the Israelites each stone is meant to represent; traditional sources are in just as much disagreement.
Imitations
The Egyptians were the first to produce an artificial imitation of turquoise,
in the glazed earthenware product faience. Later glass and enamel were
also used, and in modern times more sophisticated ceramics, porcelain,
plastics, and various assembled, pressed, bonded, and sintered products
(composed of various copper and aluminium compounds) have been developed:
examples of the latter include "Viennese turquoise", made
from precipitated aluminium phosphate coloured by copper oleate; and
"neolith", a mixture of bayerite and copper phosphate. Most
of these products differ markedly from natural turquoise in both physical
and chemical properties, but in 1972 Pierre Gilson introduced one fairly
close to a true synthetic (it does differ in chemical composition owing
to a binder used, meaning it is best described as a simulant rather
than a synthetic). Gilson turquoise is made in both a uniform colour
and with black "spiderweb matrix" veining not unlike the natural
Nevada material.
Some natural blue to blue-green materials, such as botryoidal chrysocolla with quartz drusy, are occasionally confused with, or used to imitate turquoise.The most common imitation of turquoise encountered today is dyed howlite and magnesite, both white in their natural states, and the former also having natural (and convincing) black veining similar to that of turquoise. Dyed chalcedony, jasper, and marble is less common, and much less convincing. Other natural materials occasionally confused with or used in lieu of turquoise include: variscite and faustite; chrysocolla (especially when impregnating quartz); lazulite; smithsonite; hemimorphite; wardite; and a fossil bone or tooth called odontolite or "bone turquoise", coloured blue naturally by the mineral vivianite. While rarely encountered today, odontolite was once mined in large quantities—specifically for its use as a substitute for turquoise—in southern France.
These
fakes are detected by gemmologists using a number of tests, relying
primarily on non-destructive, close examination of surface structure
under magnification; a featureless, pale blue background peppered by
flecks or spots of whitish material is the typical surface appearance
of natural turquoise, while manufactured imitations will appear radically
different in both colour (usually a uniform dark blue) and texture (usually
granular or sugary). Glass and plastic will have a much greater translucency,
with bubbles or flow lines often visible just below the surface. Staining
between grain boundaries may be visible in dyed imitations.
Some destructive tests may, however, be necessary; for example, the application of diluted hydrochloric acid will cause the carbonates odontolite and magnesite to effervesce and howlite to turn green, while a heated probe may give rise to the acrid smell so indicative of plastic. Differences in specific gravity, refractive index, light absorption (as evident in a material's absorption spectrum), and other physical and optical properties are also considered as means of separation. Imitation turquoise is so prevalent that it likely outnumbers real turquoise by a wide margin. Even material used in authentic Native American and Tibetan jewellery is often fake or, at best, heavily treated.
Treatments
Turquoise is treated to enhance both its colour and durability (i.e.,
increased hardness and decreased porosity). Historically, light waxing
and oiling were the first treatments used in ancient times, providing
a wetting effect, thereby enhancing the colour and lustre. This treatment
is more or less acceptable by tradition, especially because treated
turquoise is usually of a higher grade to begin with. Conversely, the
later development of pressure impregnation of otherwise unsaleable chalky
American material by epoxy and plastics (such as polystyrene) and water
glass, also producing a wetting effect in addition to improving durability,
are rejected by some as too radical an alteration[14]. Plastic and water
glass are technologically superior to oil and wax in that the former
treatment is far more permanent and stable, and can be applied to material
too chemically or physically unstable for oil or wax to provide sufficient
improvement. Material treated with Plastic or water glass is termed
"bonded" or "stabilized" turquoise. The epoxy binding
technique was first developed in the 1950s and has been attributed to
Colbaugh Processing of Arizona, a company that still operates today.
The majority of American material is now treated in this manner although
it is a costly process requiring many months to complete. Without such
impregnation, most American mining operations would be unprofitable.
Oiled and waxed stones are prone to "sweating" under even gentle heat or if exposed to too much sun, and hey may develop a white surface film or bloom over time. (With some skill, oil and wax treatments can be restored.) Likewise, the use of Prussian blue and other dyes, often in conjunction with bonding treatments, to enhance (that is, make uniform or completely change) colour is regarded as fraudulent by some purists, especially since some dyes may fade or rub off on the wearer. Dyes have also been used to darken the veins of turquoise. Perhaps the most radical of treatments is "reconstitution", wherein fragments of fine turquoise material, too small to be used individually, are powdered and then bonded to form a solid mass. Much, if not all, of this "reconstituted" material is likely artificial with no natural components, or may have foreign filler material added to it. Another treatment—the details of which remain undisclosed—is the so-called Zachery Process, named after its developer, electrical engineer and turquoise trader James E. Zachery. This process claims to use only medium grade material at a minimum, leaving the turquoise harder and with a better colour and lustre.
Since finer turquoise is often found as thin seams, it may be glued to a base of stronger foreign material as a means of reinforcement. These stones are termed "Backed" and it is standard practice that all turquoise cut in the Southwestern United States is backed. Native indigenous peoples of this region, because of their considerable use and wearing of turquoise, found that backing increased the durability of the turquoise. They observed that if the stone was not backed it would, for the most part, end up cracking. Early backing materials were the casings of old model T batteries and progressed to old phonograph records and most recently to the use of epoxy steel resins. This is a very helpful way of determening the age of older Native American jewelry. Backing of turquoise is not known outside of the Native American and Southwestern United States jewelry trade. All turquoise cut for this trade is backed and any stones that are not backed are considered to have been prepared by the inexperienced or cut overseas. Valuated treated turquoise of the highest quality is not discounted because it is backed and indeed the process is expected for most American commercial gemstones.
As
is so often the case with any precious stones, full disclosure is frequently
not given. It is therefore left to gemologists to detect these treatments
in suspect stones using a variety of testing methods—some of which
are necessarily destructive. For example, the use of a heated probe
applied to an inconspicuous spot will reveal oil, wax, or plastic treatment
with certainty.
Valuation and care
Richness of colour is the chief determiner of value in turquoise; generally
speaking, the most desirable is a strong sky to "robin's egg"
blue (in reference to the eggs of the American Robin); value decreases
with the increase of green hue, lightening of colour, and mottling.
In Tibet, however, a greener blue is said to be preferred. Whatever
the colour, turquoise should not be excessively soft or chalky; even
if treated, such lesser material (to which most turquoise belongs) is
liable to fade or discolour over time and will not hold up to normal
use in jewellery.
The mother rock or matrix in which turquoise is found can often be seen as splotches or a network of brown or black veins running through the stone in a netted pattern; this veining may add value to the stone if the result is complimentary, but such a result is uncommon. Such material is sometimes described as "spiderweb matrix"; it is most valued in the Southwest United States and Far East, but is not highly appreciated in the Near East where unblemished and vein-free material is ideal (regardless of how complimentary the veining may be). Uniformity of colour is desired, and in finished pieces the quality of workmanship is also a factor; this includes the quality of the polish and the symmetry of the stone. Calibrated stones—that is, stones adhering to standard jewellery setting measurements—may also be more sought after. Like coral and other opaque gems, turquoise is commonly sold at a price according to its physical size in millimetres rather than weight.
Turquoise
is treated in many different ways, some more permanent and radical than
others. Controversy exists as to whether some of these treatments should
be acceptable, but one can be more or less forgiven universally: This
is the light waxing or oiling applied to most gem turquoise to improve
its colour and lustre; if the material is of high quality to begin with,
very little of the wax or oil is absorbed and the turquoise therefore
does not "rely" on this impermanent treatment for its beauty.
All other factors being equal, untreated turquoise will always command
a higher price. Bonded and "reconstituted" material is worth
considerably less.
Being a phosphate mineral, turquoise is inherently fragile and sensitive to solvents; perfume and other cosmetics will attack the finish and may alter the colour of turquoise gems, as will skin oils, as will most commercial jewelry cleaning fluids. Prolonged exposure to direct sunlight may also discolour or dehydrate turquoise. Care should therefore be taken when wearing such jewels: cosmetics, including sunscreen and hairspray, should be applied before putting on turquoise jewellery, and they should not be worn to a beach or other sun-bathed environment. After use, turquoise should be gently cleaned with a soft cloth to avoid a build up of residue, and should be stored in its own container to avoid scratching by harder gems. Turquoise can also be adversely affected if stored in an airtight container.
For
more information (and extraordinary pictures) of varied
colors of Turquoise as shown above, visit Sky
Stone Trading.



