Monday, April 25, 2011

Turquoise and The Colorback Mine


One of the most recognizable gemstones to anyone in the world is the blue stone turquoise.  There is not another like it.  It has become the symbolic color and gemstone of the American southwest.  Its history starts in ancient Egypt where it was mined on the Sinai Peninsula.  Later Prussian turquoise was mined as a solid sky blue and Tibet turquoise is wondrous blue-green and is so sacred it is considered a national treasure.  More recently, the Native Americans of the southwest have mined it in many shades of blues and greens. 



In the 1950’s to the 1970’s turquoise was highly prized and sought after by consumers.  It was to the point that a poor prospector could find a new deposit and be wealthy beyond dream within months.  By the mid-1970’s turquoise was loosing favor with consumers and the demand dwindled to a small trickle we see today.  There is still some demand for high quality gem material with jewelers and mineral collectors but not enough to cause the huge price spike from the 1970’s.

In recent years the demand has increased.  Much quality turquoise, like at the Colorback Mine, sell for as much as a $1000 per pound or more.  That’s nearly $70 per ounce or $1.80 per carat.  Carat per carat this price doesn’t seem like much when comparing prices to a diamond.  That shouldn’t diminish the value of turquoise as its beauty far exceeds the beauty of a clear diamond. 


Colorback Mine I and II:
The Colorback mine I or in the old days Turquoise Boy mine is one half mile north of the famous Badger mine (another famous turquoise mine) and 3.5 miles North-Northwest of Tenabo (a mining district & ghost town known for its gold) just south of Crescent Valley, Nevada.

Turquoise is associated with an opalized sill that dips intruding black chert. The chert adjacent to the sill is brecciated and that is where the turquoise was formed.

The Colorback II mine has more Chalcosiderite and Variscite rather than turquoise as the major constituent. The Chalcosiderite has a beautiful black spider web pattern with white, blue, green, yellow, or orange hues. 

The variscite is a beautiful light green to “icy” green with black spider webbing or matrix throughout the stones.

Much of the material from this mine is a mix of turquoise, variscite, and chalcosidierite.  An easy and fairly reliable way to determine what you have is by color.  If your stone is more blue it is predominately turquoise.  If it is more of a strong green it is predominately variscite and if it is pale green or whitish then it is predominately chalcosidierite.  However, on the gem market it is usually ALL sold as turquoise.

Mixing of minerals like this is not uncommon.  Much of the turquoise from around the world is a mix of turquoise and other minerals. 

Wednesday, April 06, 2011

All About Serpentine


Serpentine is not a mineral, it is a group of 20 minerals that are all related chemically and structurally, all being silicate minerals.  Serpentine minerals have gotten a bad rap lately by politicians because they form fibrous minerals referred to as asbestos.  Asbestos is a house-hold word with a bad connotation.   The word asbestos describes minerals that can be pulled apart in parallel, lengthwise, flexible fibers. Asbestos minerals have had been used in industrial applications for a number of different things. 
Despite being a very important economic mineral, it has become the target of some California politicians who have characterized it as toxic.  They were trying to get serpentine removed from the records as California’s State Rock.  This is being done out of fear more than education.  Of the 20 or so asbestos minerals, only a few produce a fiber that are actually dangerous to humans.
California politicians have made a crucial error in their rational.  Serpentine doesn’t always contain asbestos minerals and many of the ones it does are not harmful.  Even when serpentine does contain harmful fibers, the amount of danger it poses is dependent on many factors include how it is released from the host rock, bioavailability,  length of the fibers, whether the host is a smoker, and the degree of exposure.  With all the factors, it is not hard to realize serpentine is a safe rock to have around.  Nor is serpentine is not toxic as they claimed. Once more of the politicians were educated, the bill was left to die with little fan fare. 

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