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  • Anyone Can Own Ametrine

    If you search online or go to a jewelry store that has a nice selection of colored stone jewelry, you might find a few pieces of ametrine for sale. The price is usually inexpensive when compared to other stones of similar size and beauty – certainly less expensive than bicolor tourmaline. Almost anyone who can…

    March 30, 2023
  • Synthetic / Treatment-Created “Ametrine”

    Laboratory experiments in 1981 determined that heat and irradiation can be used to convert natural amethyst into a bicolor material that has an appearance similar to natural ametrine. This process is costly to do well and is not known to have produced a significant amount of treatment-created “ametrine.” In 1994 a laboratory in Russia began…

    March 30, 2023
  • Ametrine Gemstones

    A crystal containing both amethyst and citrine in contact with one another can be called “ametrine.” These crystals usually contain zones of clear quartz, amethyst, and citrine. When these crystals are cut into pieces that are appropriately sized for faceting gemstones, only a portion of the stones will be ametrine. The remainder will be amethyst,…

    March 30, 2023
  • History of Ametrine

    According to legend, the Ayoreo Indian tribe of eastern Bolivia knew about the bicolor quartz crystals over 500 years ago. Perhaps the earliest formal documentation of natural quartz crystals with zonal coloring of purple and yellow is in a 1925 issue of American Mineralogist. These were basal sections of quartz crystals with color sectors alternating…

    March 30, 2023
  • What Gives Ametrine Its Color?

    The colors of amethyst and citrine are produced by iron impurities with different oxidation states within the quartz. Purple is thought to be produced by Fe3+ that is oxidized to Fe4+ by natural radiation emitted by the decay of potassium-40 in nearby rocks. The golden-yellow is thought to be produced by Fe3+. If a well-formed ametrine crystal…

    March 30, 2023
  • Where is Ametrine Produced?

    Ametrine is rarely found in nature. Almost all of the world’s commercial ametrine production has been from the Anahi Mine in southeastern Bolivia. The mine has been operated by Minerales y Metales del Oriente S.R.L. since 1989. The Anahi Mine is in a dolomitic limestone of the Murcielago Group, a sequence of limestones up to 1500 feet…

    March 30, 2023
  • What is Ametrine?

    Most people have never heard of ametrine and are very surprised to see purple and yellow in a single transparent gemstone. Ametrine is a rare gemstone with a finite supply that is produced in commercial quantities at only one mine in the world. It is a relative newcomer to the gemstone trade, being available in…

    March 30, 2023
  • Rose Quartz as “Color of the Year”

    PANTONE®, the color company, really likes the pink color of rose quartz. They enjoy it so much and find it so useful that they named Rose Quartz as their “Color of the Year” for 2016. [6] It is nice to know that a company with a global reputation for its expertise on color has been…

    March 30, 2023
  • La Madona Rosa and The Van Allen Belt

    Rose quartz is not one of the most commonly seen specimens in mineral collections because it rarely occurs in the well-formed crystals preferred by collectors. The exceptions have been a few spectacular specimens of pink quartz with well-formed crystals that have sold for very high prices. One specimen of note is “La Madona Rosa” (The…

    March 30, 2023
  • Sources, Treatments, and Synthetics

    Rose quartz is found in abundance in many deposits throughout the world. Much of the rose quartz that is sold today is produced in Brazil, South Africa, India, and Madagascar. Other sources include Namibia, Mozambique, and Sri Lanka. In the United States, a deposit near Custer, South Dakota once produced significant amounts of rose quartz.…

    March 30, 2023
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