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GEMS
THERAPY
Composition
of Gems
Various gems are in constant
use, but of these, nine are claimed to be superior while
eighteen of them are of lesser relevance.
Ruby
- This is a gem of various
shades of red corundum.
- Some stones are pink,
some blackish and some pale coloured.
- It is a hot stone, and
one of the most valued among precious stones.
- It generally occurs
in crystals of six-sided prisms.
- All are translucent
and suitable due to their wide range of colour, and hardness.
- A flawless ruby is smooth,
having a luster, brilliance and radiance, and a rich,
a red colour.
- Rubies are very costly
because of their scarcity.
- A large ruby is more
rare and more expensive than a large diamond.
- The best ruby is the
one which, when immersed in milk, emits red rays in the,
milk, or the one whose rays are red in the early morning
sun, or it glows in darkness.
- The rarest and most
expensive shade is described as being the colour of pigeon's
blood - a rich, velvety, deep red, but without fire or
sparkle.
- Because rubies are more
opaque than diamonds and lack sparkle and brilliance,
they are cut differently.
- The stone is polished
and cut into a convex form, but is not faceted. This is
most commonly used for rubies because it accentuates the
colour of the gem.
- A blemished ruby has
a depression, or a pale tinge of colour, or else has sprinklings
of white, black or honey-coloured dots.
- The deepening colour
of ruby with time is an indication of grave danger and
great personal misfortune.
Diamond
- This is a mineral,
one of the two crystalline forms of the element carbon
- the drab-sounding dark substance behind the world's
most dazzling jewel, and the hardest known substance used
as a gem.
- It is a hot gem of white,
yellow, red, pink, blue, green or black colour.
- Unlike other gems, diamonds
are prized for their absence of colour. The clearer the
stone, the more valuable the diamond.
- The diamond that is
colourless, with a tinge of blue or sprays of blue and
red rays, is considered to be the best, and the most common
variety used in jewelry
- A coloured stone is
called a "fancy diamond".
- Clarity refers to imperfections
in the stone. A diamond free of any imperfections visible
under a ten-power microscope is considered flawless.
- A diamond is blemished
if it has dots or has the impression of a drop or has
the impression of a drop of water.
- Its specific gravity
is remarkably constant, the refractive index is the highest
among all gemstones, and the dispersion is very strong.
- A hexagonal or octagonal
diamond, if reflected on water, displays the seven colours
of the rainbow.
- As for carats, a two-carat
diamond can easily cost more than twice as much as a one-carat
diamond.
- The cut of a diamond
is the "C" that carries the most clout because
cutting determines the diamond's beauty and brilliance.
Cutting is the spark that ignites the fire of the stone,
by luring light into the gem that's then reflected back
out as sparkling brilliance.
- The size of the diamond
is not nearly as important as the cut; a big stone is
less valuable than a masterfully cut smaller one.
- Diamonds may be cut
into round, oval, pear or emerald shapes.
- Round, the most popular
cut, is called "brilliant" because it creates
the most light.
- The oval, pear-shaped
or emerald-shaped cuts can actually make diamonds appear
larger than they are.
Pearl
- Pearl is obtained from
certain shelled molasses, chiefly the oyster freshwater
mussel.
- Although organic, the
pearl is composed mainly of mineral matter.
- Cuttured pearls are
coveted for jewelry and are created by interfering with
the natural process.
- To the untrained eye,
it is impossible to tell the difference between a cultured
pearl and a natural one.
- Natural pearls can be
ten times more expensive than their cultured counterparts.
- Pearls, like most gems,
are judged on colour, and form three basic groups - white
with creamy and pink being the most desirable; black and
various shades of grey, and coloured pearls, which are
almost always of fresh water origin.
- The best variety is
the pink one which is lustrous, clear and heavy , and
is the most precious among pearls.
- The pure pearl is lustrous
and round, though the long and the flat ones also have
certain curative powers.
- A blemished pearl is
broken, or has spots or cracks, and is dull in colour.
Emerald
- This gem is a
rich variety of beryls, and the colour is due to the presence
of chromium oxide.
- It is a hot stone, and
is one of the most expensive gemstones.
- Its colours range from
a deep velvet green to a bright grass green.
- A flawless emerald is
smooth and transparent, and has radiance and brilliance,
spraying bright rays.
- A blemished stone has
a depression or cracks, is lustrous but brittle, or has
black or yellow spots with a rough surface.
- They are softer than
diamonds, rubies or sapphires.
- They lack much brilliance
and have virtually no fire, Because colour rather than
brilliance, makes emeralds valuable the convex cut is
how an important emerald is usually crafted.
Coral
- A coral is the
hard, calcareous, red, white or black skeleton of any
of the various marine invertebrate animals. These skeletons
collectively form reefs or islands.
- Its colour varies from
shades of red to white and yellow.
- A good and flewless
coral will be perfectly round or oval, of an opaque red
colour, emitting a sheen, and having a smooth surface.
- It is smooth, and devoid
of any hole or perforation.
- The blemished coral
has black or white spots, a depression, a crack, a bend
or a twist on the surface and is sometimes multihued.
- The coral is worn for
life and blood force.
Topaz
- This is a transparent
mineral gem, being a silicate and fluoride of aluminum,
and generally found in granite rocks.
- It is a cold gem, occurring
naturally in a prismatic form with a pyramidal termination.
- Its colour is yellow,
but it also occurs in pink and blue shades.
- The blemished stone has
cracks, or red dots, or a depression.
Sapphire
- The blue sapphire is
believed to bestow purity of purpose and beed.
- This is a valuable blue
variety of corundum.
- Sapphires and rubies
are actually different colours of the same mineral, corundum.
But while rubies are always red, sapphires come in a variety
of colours - pink, orange, violet, green, yellow, and
of course, blue.
- It is a cold gem, with
the same hardness, specific gravity and refracting indices
as those of ruby.
- The best blue sapphire
does not change its colour when held in front of an electric
light, while others show a navy blue tinge.
- It is smooth and transparent,
soft to the touch, and it sends out rays from inside.
- The star sapphire is
the "stone of destiny", in which three center
of the stone, symbolizing faith, destiny and hope.
- Sapphires are believed
to ward off fraud and terror, protecting one from dangers
and envy.
- A blemished stone may
have white lines on it, or a depression, it may be dull
and opaque, or else is double-coloured or milky.
Zircon
- This is a common
tetragonal mineral, occurring in small, opaque or transparent
prismatic crystals.
- Resembling a diamond,
it is a cold stone.
- It is naturally colourless,
reddish-orange, brownish-red, grey, violet-grey, or green.
- When heated, it turns
bluish-white, and the translucent specimen is used as
a gem.
- A good stone reflects
a golden colour when seen from a distance, is transparent
and homogeneous, soft to the touch, lustrous and radiant.
- A blemished stone shows
a light blackish hue from a distance, is dull, flat-bodied,
full of layers, or resembles a yellow piece of glass.
Cat's
Eye
- This is a hard,
semitransparent variety of quartz, much valued as a gem.
- This very hot stone
is opalescent, and is of various shades ranging from a
cloudy yellow to a brownish-green colour.
- Due to its opalescent
radiation of colours that resemble a cat's eye, it is
called so.
- The pure variety has
a yellowish radiance and a white, brilliant straight band.
- The blemished one has
a depression, or spots, webbed lines, or a dull sheen.
Other
Stones
1. Opal
- A mineral consisting of hydrous silica, occurring in numerous
varieties and colours, neither as hard nor as dense as quartz,
the finest characterized by an iridescent reflection of
light. The use of opal lifts ordinary consciousness to cosmic
awareness.
2. Peridot - A precious
stone of yellowish-green colour.
3. Tourmaline - A complex
soft silicate mineral of boron and aluminum, occurring in
black, red, green, brown and white colours, the clear varieties
being used as gems.
4. Amethyst - The violet
variety of quartz is used as a precious stone, containing
traces of manganese, titanium and iron.
5. Rock
Crystal - A transparent quartz of a colourless
or a shining white colour.
6. Moonstone - A translucent
variety of feldspar with a pearly lustre, and having a glistening
band inside which rolls with the turn of the stone.
7. Garnet - A hard,
vitreous silicate mineral occurring in a number of varieties;
the common deep red transparent variety are used as gems.
8. Aquamarine - The
finest beryl, and so called because of its bluish, sea-green,
bluish-green tint and it is transparent.
9. Bloodstone - A greenish
kind of quartz with small blood-like spots of red jasper
scattered through it.
10. Lapis-lazuli - A
soft, semiprecious stone of a rich blue colour, consisting
of lazurite and other minerals.
11. Agate - A semiprecious
pellucid mineral, consisting of bands or layers of various
colours blended together.
12. Turquoise - A sky-blue
or greenish-blue mineral. It is worn for protection and
is believed to purify the atmosphere of the world.
13. Jade - A hard gemstone,
either nephritic or jadeite, often green in colour, either
translucent or opaque, and sometimes veined.
14. Gypsum - A mineral,
a hydrous sulphate of calcium occurring both in crystalline
and massive forms.
15. Smoky quartz - A
variety of crystallized quartz quartz, ranging in colour
from light yellow to deep brown.
16. Onyx - A semi-pellucid,
dark green stone with variously coloured reins.
17. Canelian - A variety
of chalcedony, of a deep red, flesh-red, or pale reddish
colour.
18. Jasper - An opaque,
dark red quartz, which takes on an elegant polish.
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