<h2 id="c9">CORUNDUM AND SPINEL.</h2>
<h3 class="generic">CORUNDUM.</h3>
<p>The mineral species Corundum affords
a number of gems known by different
names. These differences arise from the
fact that the stones were used as gems
before their mineralogical identity was
discovered. Thus red Corundum is
known as the ruby and blue Corundum
as the sapphire. When Corundum suitable
for gem purposes occurs of other
colors, such as green, yellow or violet,
the gems are sometimes known as green,
yellow or violet sapphires, respectively,
or by the name of another gem which
they closely resemble in color, with the
adjective Oriental prefixed. Such are
the gems known as Oriental topaz, Oriental
emerald, Oriental aquamarine, Oriental
hyacinth, Oriental amethyst and
Oriental chrysolite. Colorless Corundum
is known as leucosapphire.
While Corundum of all colors is used for
gems, it is only that which is transparent
which can be so employed. This is
sometimes called noble Corundum to distinguish
it from common Corundum.
The two, however, often occur together.
Common Corundum is used as an abrasive,
emery being one of its varieties,
but it has no gem value.</p>
<p>Corundum is a sesquioxide of aluminum,
with the percentages aluminum
53.2, oxygen 46.8. Its hardness is 9
in the scale of which diamond is 10, and
no other mineral except the latter equals
it in hardness. This hardness gives it
a wearing quality as a gem second only
to the diamond. The varieties of Corundum
differ slightly in hardness, sapphire
being the hardest. Noble Corundum has
a brilliant, vitreous luster, which, while
not equal to that of the diamond, is superior
to that exhibited by almost any other
gem. Corundum is a heavy mineral, its
specific gravity being four times that of
water. This high specific gravity affords
an easy means of distinguishing the gems
of Corundum from those of other species.
Corundum is infusible and is not
attacked by acids. It crystallizes in
the rhombohedral division of the hexagonal
system, certain crystal forms
being characteristic of the two varieties,
ruby and sapphire. Thus ruby tends to
crystallize in flat rhombohedral crystals,
while sapphire generally forms in
longer, hexagonal prisms. (See colored
plate in November number.)
Corundum is doubly refracting and
dichroic. Of the different colors
of Corundum above referred to, the blue
or sapphire is most common, the red or
ruby next. The other colors occur
rather sparingly, green having been almost
unknown until the discovery of the
Montana sapphires. The nature of the
coloring ingredient of the different varieties
of Corundum is not known, but there
is some reason for believing it to be chromium,
for Fremy obtained artificial red
and blue Corundum by mixing chromium
with his other ingredients, after many
attempts to obtain the desired color had
failed.</p>
<p>Red Corundum varies in hue from
rose to deep red. That of the latter
tint is the true ruby, the color known
as pigeon’s blood being most highly
prized. Faultless stones of this color have
long been the most valuable of gems, exceeding
the diamond in price, weight for
weight, unless the latter is colored.
Rubies above three carats in weight are
about ten times more valuable than ordinary
diamonds of the corresponding
weights. But few rubies exceeding ten
carats are known. The King of Pegu is
reported to have one the size of a hen’s
egg, but as no one has ever seen it the
story may well be doubted. In the crown
of the Empress Catherine was, however,
one the size of a pigeon’s egg. There is
also a large uncut ruby in the British
crown, which Ruskin calls the loveliest
precious stone of which he has any
knowledge.</p>
<p>The chief home of the ruby is Burmah.
From its mines and those of Siam and
Ceylon have come practically all the
world’s supply of rubies. The most important
Burmese mines are in Mogouk,
ninety miles north of Mandalay. The rubies
were evidently formed in limestone,
which is now much decomposed, and
seem to have been the result of metamorphism
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
of the limestone by the entrance
of eruptive rocks. The ruby-bearing
earth is known as “byon,” and the stones
are obtained from it by washing. The
rubies are usually in the form of more
or less complete crystals. The mines
have been worked since the British occupation
of Burmah in 1886 by a British
company, and there can be little doubt
that a desire to acquire these mines was
the chief reason for the occupation. The
mines have not proved very profitable,
however, and only within the last year or
two has the company been able to pay
any dividends. The hope of success has
lain in the introduction of machinery for
washing the byon more cheaply than it
could be done by the primitive native
methods, and it is now believed by the
introduction of an electrical power plant
that this has been accomplished. This
company now produces at least one-half
the annual yield of rubies of the world.</p>
<p>Previous to the English working of
the mines the ruby mining was performed
by local miners under control of
the native government, all rubies above
a certain size going to the king. Whenever
a ruby of unusual size was found a
procession of grandees, with soldiers
and elephants, was sent out to meet it.
One of the titles of the King of Burmah
was Lord of the Rubies.</p>
<p>The Siamese rubies come from near
Bangkok, on the Gulf of Siam. They
occur in a clay which seems to be the
product of alteration of a besalt. These
rubies are not equal in quality to those
of Burmah. Rubies are also found in
the gem gravels of Ceylon and in Afghanistan,
thirty-two miles east of Cabul.
In our own country ruby Corundum is
occasionally found in connection with
opaque Corundum in Macon County,
North Carolina. In the gravels of Caler
Fork of Cowee Creek of this county good
rubies are found in sufficient quantity to
reward systematic mining for them.</p>
<p>These rubies are mostly small, but
some gems of three or four carats’
weight and of excellent color have been
obtained.</p>
<p>Among the Montana sapphires an occasional
red stone is found, but they do
not have the choicest red color.</p>
<p>Another source of rubies is their artificial
production, after the method discovered
by the French chemist Fremy.
These are made by heating a mixture of
aluminum sesquioxide, carbonate of lime,
barium fluoride and potassium chromate
in a porous clay crucible to a temperature
of 1500 degrees C. and keeping the mixture
fluid for eight days. Well-formed,
clear crystals up to one-third of a carat
in weight are thus produced, which have
the hardness and color of native ruby.
They are not considered so valuable as
gems as the latter, and can be distinguished
by the air bubbles which may be
seen with a lens. The expense of making
them is nearly equal to the value
of native rubies, so that their production
is likely to be limited.</p>
<p>Rubies were known to the ancients,
being mentioned in the Bible in Proverbs
and Job. The Greeks and Romans
ascribed to the ruby the power of
giving light in the dark, and the
Hindoos describe the abodes of their
gods as thus lighted. The ruby was
much worn as an amulet, being supposed
to protect the wearer against
plague, poison and evil spirits. It
was also thought that it would turn
dark if its owner were in danger and
would not regain its color until the peril
was over.</p>
<p>The ruby is usually cut in the form of
the brilliant, like the diamond, but sometimes
the step cut is advantageously employed.
The stones from India are
usually rounded by the native gem cutters
and worn in this manner.</p>
<p>Blue precious Corundum or sapphire
is more abundant than the red or ruby.
Like the red the blue color seems to be
due to a content of chromium, since in
the artificial crystals already mentioned
as produced by Fremy, both colors occur
at times in the same crystal. The blue
color, however, unlike the reds, disappears
on heating.</p>
<p>Blue Corundum exhibits various
shades from light to dark, the color most
highly prized being that known as cornflower
blue. A good sapphire should
also have high luster and a velvety sheen.
As already noted, sapphire is somewhat
harder than ruby, and it is also somewhat
heavier. The Montana sapphires
are said to be especially hard.</p>
<p>Sapphires have at the present time not
over half the value of a ruby of the same
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
size. A price of forty dollars per carat
is an average one for a stone of not over
ten carats and, as much larger stones are
comparatively common, the price does
not increase so rapidly as does that of
the ruby with an increase in size.</p>
<p>The world’s supply of sapphires comes
chiefly from Siam. The most important
mines of that country are
those of Battambong, a city southeast
of Bangkok. The sapphires occur
in a sandy clay out of which
they are washed. The sapphire-bearing
region is about a hundred miles in length.
Together with the sapphires occur some
rubies, especially in the southern part of
the district. Sapphires also occur among
the rubies of Burmah, but in small numbers.
The so-called gem gravels of Ceylon
furnish many sapphires, though their
quality is not equal to those of Siam
because of paleness of color. In these
gem gravels occur also ruby, spinel, garnet,
topaz, amethyst, tourmaline and hyacinth.
Another locality for sapphires,
discovered in the early eighties, is Banskar,
in Cashmere, India. These stones
were first disclosed by the fall of an avalanche,
and later were discovered to exist
in the region in considerable numbers.
For a time they could be cheaply purchased,
but are now jealously guarded by
the government. The Montana sapphires
have been known since 1865, but
were not systematically worked until
1891. They occur in river sands east of
Helena, and were first obtained in washing
for gold. Now the mother rock has
been discovered, and this is mined, the
rock being taken out, piled in heaps and
submitted to the action of frost through
the winter. The sapphires thus become
loosened and can be readily separated.
These sapphires are well crystallized and
are of good average size, though few
gems exceed six carats in weight. Their
luster and color are for the most part
of first quality, and the stones are in demand
for the best of jewelry.</p>
<p>Noble Corundum of other colors than
those of blue and red is not of abundant
occurrence nor is it ordinarily as highly
prized as are the sapphire and ruby. Colorless
sapphire or leucosapphire is sometimes
used as a substitute for the diamond,
from which it can readily be distinguished
by its lower hardness and higher
specific gravity.</p>
<p>Certain specimens of both sapphire and
ruby, but especially the former, exhibit
when lighted a six-rayed star. This appears
as beams of light, radiating from a
center, which changes in position as the
stone is turned. Such stones are called
star or asteriated sapphires or rubies, and
are highly prized. They are usually cut
with rounded surface, as this best brings
out the figure. The cause of the star-shaped
figure is generally supposed to be
the presence of countless microscopic
cavities in the stone, which are arranged
parallel to the faces of a six-sided prism.
The total reflection of the light from
these causes the star. Others think that
multitudes of twining lamellæ cause the
appearance.</p>
<p>Sapphire is a word which is the same
in nearly all languages. In Chaldean,
Hebrew, Greek and Latin it has the same
form as in modern tongues. This fact
testifies to the ancient use of the stone.
In early times sapphire was believed to
be a destroyer of poison, so that if put
into a glass with a spider or venomous
reptile it would kill it. It was regarded
also as a remedy against fevers.</p>
<h3 class="generic">SPINEL.</h3>
<p>The group of Spinel includes in mineralogy
a number of species of different
though analogous composition. The
Spinel employed as a gem is almost
wholly confined to the magnesium aluminate,
having the percentage composition
alumina 71.8 and magnesia 28.2. This is
usually of a red color, different shades
giving gems known by different names as
follows: Deep red, spinel-ruby; rose-red,
Balas ruby; yellow- or orange-red, rubicelle;
violet red, almandine ruby. Spinel
is thus known among gems chiefly as a
relative of the ruby, and this sort of
Spinel will first be considered.</p>
<p>The Spinel rubies differ from the true
or corundum rubies in hardness, specific
gravity and system of crystallization.
The hardness of Spinel is 8, or about
that of topaz, and the specific gravity
3.6. It is thus neither as hard nor as
heavy as corundum ruby. Again, the
system of crystallization differs. Spinel
crystallizes in the isometric system and
is usually found in the form, of octahedrons,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
while corundum ruby is hexagonal
in crystallization. (See colored plate
in November number.) Spinel is singly
refracting in polarized light and corundum
doubly refracting. Spinel ruby is
infusible before the blowpipe, but on heating
undergoes a curious series of changes
in color which are quite characteristic.
The red changes first to brown, and then
becomes black and opaque, but on cooling
the black changes to green, then becomes
nearly colorless and finally the stone resumes
its original red color. As a small
percentage of chromium is usually found
by analysis to exist in ruby Spinel, its
color is generally considered to be due to
this ingredient. While the Spinel ruby is
considered of less value than the corundum
ruby and is sometimes by fraud or
error substituted for the latter, it yet has
a definite value as a gem and is sold under
the name of Spinel ruby or some of
its varieties. This value is usually reckoned
at about half that of the corundum
ruby, although variations in quality of
the stones, as well as changes in demand,
cause differences of price. Thus Emanuel
mentions a Spinel ruby of good quality
weighing 40 carats, which in 1856 was
sold for two thousand dollars, but which
in 1862 brought at public auction only
four hundred dollars. In 1866, however,
it was again sold for twelve hundred dollars.
The Spinel ruby of the French
crown jewels, weighing 56 carats, was
in 1791 valued at ten thousand dollars.</p>
<p>Not only is Spinel ruby related to corundum
ruby in color and use, but the
two are frequently associated together
in nature. The gem gravels of Ceylon,
Siam, Australia and Brazil contain both
kinds of rubies, and the ruby mines of
Upper Burmah, where the corundum
ruby occurs in a crystalline limestone,
produce also large quantities of Spinel
rubies. Spinel rubies also come in large
quantity from Badakschan, in Afghanistan,
near the river Oxus, the name of
Balas rubies, by which they are often
known, being said to be derived from Beloochistan,
or Balakschan. The Persians
have a tradition regarding these mines
that they were disclosed by an earthquake
which rent the mountain in twain.
The localities above mentioned furnish
nearly all the Spinel rubies of commerce.
A few have been found in North America
at Hamburgh, New Jersey, and San
Luis Obispo, California. But these localities
have never afforded any appreciable
supply. No Spinel rubies of great
size are known. Bauer mentions as the
largest known, two cut stones, one of 81
carats and the other 72½ carats, exhibited
at the London Exposition of 1862. The
King of Oude is said at one time to have
possessed a Spinel ruby the size of a pigeon’s
egg.</p>
<p>Spinel occurs in many other colors besides
red, such as orange, green, blue and
indigo, as well as white and black. Occasionally
colorless Spinels occur, and as
they cannot be distinguished by their behavior
in polarized light from the diamond,
it is sometimes sought to substitute
them for the latter. They can be
detected at once, however, by their inferior
hardness. While Spinels of any
color, if transparent and free from flaws,
make desirable gems, the only colors
found in sufficient quantity outside of the
red to make an appreciable supply are
the blue and the black. The blue Spinels
resemble the sapphire in color, though
they are somewhat paler. They come
chiefly from Ceylon and Burmah, where
they occur together with the ruby Spinel.
The black Spinel is known as Ceylonite,
or pleonaste, and is also obtained chiefly
from Ceylon, although occurring of quality
suitable for cutting at Mount Vesuvius
in Italy.</p>
<p>Like the ruby, Spinel can be made artificially,
the process being to heat a
mixture of alumina and magnesia with
boracic acid, and if the red color is desired,
a little chromium oxide.</p>
<p>The Spinel ruby seems to have been
known to the ancients equally with the
corundum ruby, and the two were probably
often confounded. The natives of
India call the Spinel the pomegranate
ruby and believe to this day that it possesses
valuable medicinal properties.</p>
<p><span class="lr"><span class="sc">Oliver Cummings Farrington.</span></span></p>
<div class="fig"> id="fig4"> <ANTIMG src="images/i12503.jpg" alt="" width-obs="500" height-obs="554" /> <p class="caption">WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW. <br/>(Zonotrichia leucophrys). <br/>Life-size.
<br/><span class="small">FROM COL. CHI. ACAD. SCIENCES.</span></p>
</div>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />