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NC farm produces emerald shaped into massive gem

Arcadian

Ideal_Rock
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its HYOOGE!! :eek:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100830/ap_ ... na_emerald


By EMERY P. DALESIO, Associated Press Writer Emery P. Dalesio, Associated Press Writer – Mon Aug 30, 7:07 pm ET

RALEIGH, N.C. – An emerald so large it's being compared with the crown jewels of Russian empress Catherine the Great was pulled from a pit near corn rows at a North Carolina farm.

The nearly 65-carat emerald its finders are marketing by the name Carolina Emperor was pulled from a farm once so well known among treasure hunters that the owners charged $3 a day to shovel for small samples of the green stones. After the gem was cut and re-cut, the finished product was about one-fifth the weight of the original find, making it slightly larger than a U.S. quarter and about as heavy as a AA battery.

The emerald compares in size and quality to one surrounded by diamonds in a brooch once owned by Catherine the Great, who was empress in the 18th century, that Christie's auction house in New York sold in April for $1.65 million, said C.R. "Cap" Beesley, a New York gemologist who examined the stone.

While big, uncut crystals and even notable gem-quality emeralds have come from the community 50 miles northwest of Charlotte called Hiddenite, there has never been one so big it's worthy of an imperial treasury, Beesley said.
Click image to see photos of the nearly 65-carat emerald

:lickout:


"It is the largest cut emerald ever to be found in North America," Beesley said in a telephone interview from Myanmar, an Asian country rich in precious gems.

The discovery is a rarity for emeralds found not in the rich veins of South America and Asia but in North America, said Robert Simon, owner of Windsor Jewelers in Winston-Salem.

"Most of the stones that have come out have not been gem-quality that I would mount in jewelry," said Simon, who was part owner of a 7.85-carat, dime-sized emerald found in the same community in 1998 that has since been set in jewelry and sold to a private owner.

Terry Ledford, 53, found the roughly 2-inch-square chunk rimmed with spots of iron a year ago on a 200-acre farm owned by business partner Renn Adams, 90, and his siblings. The rural community of Hiddenite is named for a paler stone that resembles emerald.

"It was so dark in color that holding it up to the sun you couldn't even get the light to come through it," a quality that ensured an intense green hue once the stone was cut with facets that allowed light into the gem's core, Ledford said.

The North Carolina stone was cut to imitate the royal emerald, Ledford said. A museum and some private collectors interested in buying the emerald have been in contact, Ledford said.

Modeling an empress's emerald is likely to have less influence on the North Carolina stone's sale price than its clarity, color and cut, said Douglas Hucker, CEO of the American Gem Trade Association, a Dallas, Texas-based trade association for dealers in colored gems.

"A 65-carat cut emerald from North Carolina is a big, big stone," he said. But "once an emerald is cut, it's subject to the same type of market conditions that any emerald would be."

Emeralds are part of North Carolina's mineral claim to fame, though other places in the U.S. also are rich in gems. Maine mines have yielded aquamarine and amethyst, Montana bears sapphires, Idaho is known for star garnets, and Arkansas has diamonds.

[Related: Greenpeace blocks drilling in Greenland]

It's not fully known why small, subterranean cavities containing emeralds formed in central North Carolina, said geologist Michael Wise of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, who has studied the underground world around Hiddenite for years.

Emeralds are produced where a superheated fluid carrying the element beryllium migrated through rocks that contain chromium, Wise said.

"This doesn't happen frequently," Wise said. "The conditions have to be just right to make an emerald. ... It happens to be the case at this particular place."

Adams said decades ago when his parents owned the farm, they allowed anyone with a shovel to dig for emeralds on the property for $3 a day. Virtually all of it was too full of flaws to be cut into precious stones and was mostly sold to mineral collectors, Adams said.

Ledford said they don't plan to quit after pocketing the profits from their big find, Ledford said.

"We'll definitely keep on mining," he said. "It would be good to know you don't have to go and could do it for pleasure. You feel like you've got to find something to survive but since we found this emerald, once we get it sold, there will be less stress."

65ctemerald.jpeg

65ctemerald2.jpeg

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i can see it now: a pricescope get together with shovels....let the digging begin!

MoZo
 
That's how they cut it???
 
Nashville said:
That's how they cut it???

Yeah I know :shock: . I think they should have left it as rough.


-A
 
That cutting is almost a crime. :(

:nono:
 
That looks about as “native” as they come; I’d rather enjoy it in its rough state. ;(
 
Arcadian said:
Nashville said:
That's how they cut it???

Yeah I know :shock: . I think they should have left it as rough.


-A

I completely agree, it was better as rough. I'm really surprised they let someone cut it that way. Maybe some of our lapidary experts can explain it better, was there a reason for it? Blech.
 
It looks like it was cut for maximum weight retention, which is not too surprising for an emerald that size. Look at the natural outline of the crystal, it is almost preformed for the hexagonal shape of the cut stone. While the cutting may not be up to our standards it will probably still sell fast to the collectors looking for large rare emeralds.
 
Nashville said:
That's how they cut it???


I know! What a shame! You would think all the hoopla would produce a better cut stone! I would love for the lapidary experts to chime in on that cut!
 
Jim Rentfrow said:
It looks like it was cut for maximum weight retention, which is not too surprising for an emerald that size. Look at the natural outline of the crystal, it is almost preformed for the hexagonal shape of the cut stone. While the cutting may not be up to our standards it will probably still sell fast to the collectors looking for large rare emeralds.

Jim I can understand what your saying (sort of) And agree it was cut to save weight. I don't think anyone says it should be precision cut, but I seriously think my neighbors dog could have cut that stone way better than that. :|


-A
 
It definately is not very appealing to my eyes either. If you reread the article it states that the emerald was cut to mimic an emerald set in a brooch and surrounded by diamonds that was owned by Catherine the Great. Combine that with weight retention and I am guessing that is why the lack of uniformity and its other charateristics are present.
 
WOWZA! :shock: I'd say the stone was sanded and NOT cut...oh well. Seems like they had a method to their madness at least.
 
I wonder which jam peg stone cutter working under primitive conditions in poor lighting, sweltering heat and for little money did the honors?
And this is a re-cut? What could it possibly have looked like before this?
Maybe they were trying to capture the same funky cut that the ancient empress stone had done to it so long ago? It does look primitive if that is the look they were going for, in that case, congratulations are in order. LOL
 
You know, Catherine the Great was quite a playful lady, to put it mildly. I can vision her frolicking with Count Potyomkin in a stack of hay and losing her brooch... I do not know how they ended up in North Carolina, though... but Count Potyomkin was always looking for ways to expand into new territories... Or maybe Russia was exporting hay at that time... :lol: :lol: :lol:
 
And regarding Emperor Maximilian...(and Imelda Marcos). He was always of interest to me because of this historic rumor of him being the actual son of Napoleon II. It even penetrated into the Wikipedia. Ladies of the PS, if you google Napoleon II and look at his potrtait... he was the handsomest man of his time, unbelievable that Napoleon could produce such a handsome kid. Maximilian, too, was handsome and kind, but very unhappy. A totally crazy wife, the throne of Mexico that he did not want, his tragic death... They all died tragically. Imelda Marcos did not end well, either.
Sorry for threadjacking, history was always my first hobby. I looked up Napoleon II again ... the official portrait in Wikipedia probably captures his features better, but I saw his effigy... They say when he stayed in Vienna, ladies would be waiting across the palace to capture the moment when he would come out on the balcony...
 
While I agree about the cutting, the color is gorgeous, I would not kick it out of my jewelery box! I did not know we had any emeralds in the states, I learn something everytime I log in to ps.
 
Decogirl said:
I did not know we had any emeralds in the states, I learn something everytime I log in to ps.


The story of how they were discovered was pretty interesting. I read a story on it in Readers Digest a few years back. The guy who found them put everything on the line and the bank was literally coming to take over the equipment the day he hit his first deposit.
 
I know the person that found this crystal. Terry Ledford also owns the Jackson Crossroads Amethyst Mine. See him a couple times a year. This location has produced emeralds, as well as Hiddenite, for a long time...since the 19th century. Terry has lots of Hiddenite to show for it. The Adams farm is legendary among miners. My buddy Ed Speer has a sweet website about NC emeralds he has put together over the years if anyone is interested..has a good page on the Adams farm.
http://www.northcarolinaemeralds.info/HiddeniteDistrict/AdamsMine/Adams.htm

"The story of how they were discovered was pretty interesting. I read a story on it in Readers Digest a few years back. The guy who found them put everything on the line and the bank was literally coming to take over the equipment the day he hit his first deposit."

Jim, you are referring to Jamie Hills NAEM Mine
 
Emeralds are not really about good cutting and sparkle. They are 100% about color, so to cut it that way isn't something out of the ordinary. Many look awesome as cabochons actually.

Does anyone know how NC emerald compares to Colombian?
 
WOW, that emerald is huuuge!! :eek:

Even with the not so stellar cutting, I still think it's beautiful, and the color is amazing. What a rich, deep green. :love:
 
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