·Sri Lanka: Rutile needles forming silk, three phase inclusions, zircon crystal with haloes
and feathers, lines of spinel octahedral. Elongate negative crystals.
Star corundum is a special variety of ruby or sapphire with retile exsolutions along the
crystallographic planes occurring in such a way that a properly cut cabochon will reflect a six
rayed star on the C-axis. A twelve rayed star is occasionally visible due to twinning of the
corundum.
Gem quality ruby comes from Afghanistan, Myanmar(Burma), Cambodia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka,
Tanzania, Thailand and India while sapphire is mined in East Africa, Kampuchea, Kashmir,
Thailand, Australia, USA. In India, corundum occurs in Andhra Pradesh (poor quality ruby and
sapphire and star corundum), Jammu and Kashmir (blue sapphire), Karnataka, Kerala, Orissa,
Tamil Nadu, Meghalaya and Madhya Pradesh. For further detail, the reader is referred to the
special volume ‘Gems and Gem Industry in India’ by R. V. Karanth.
The simulants of ruby include pink tourmaline or rubellite, red garnet (sold as Arizona Ruby or
Cape Ruby), garnet or rose quartz (sold as American ruby), red spinel and pink topaz. Also red
glass and paste are frequently marketed as ruby. Plate-6 shows a spinel (a part of the British
crown jewelry that was originally taken to be a ruby). The common stimulants of blue sapphire
are kyanite, synthetically prepared blue spinel, blue tourmaline or indicolite, iolite and zoisite
along with glass imitations. Yellow sapphire is often simulated by citrine (generally burnt
amethyst) and even oligoclase.
Enhancement, as discussed in Chapter-6 is also common in the corundum group of gems.
Synthetics are very common for the corundum group. However, features like curved growth
lines (Plate-5), remnants of dye (Plate-5), bubbles (Plate-5) and twisted feathers (Plate-5) can
give them away. The gemologist must also be careful about doublets (Plate-5) which may bear
inclusions of both natural and synthetic origin.
7.1.3. Beryl
The beryl group of minerals (Be2Al2 (SiO3)6) occur as hexagonal prisms and have a wide variety
of color and types : emerald (green, Plate-7, known as Panna in ancient India), aquamarine (blue
green, Plate-7), heliodor (golden/yellow, Plate-7), morganite (pink, Plate-7), goshenite
(colorless), bixbite (red) and maxixe-type (dark blue which fades in daylight).
Depending upon substitutions, the specific gravity of beryl varies from 2.7-2.8, hardness is 7.5-
8.0, refractive index 1.56-1.59, DR 0.005-0.008, low dispersion (0.014) and uniaxial negative
optic sign. The luster is vitreous. Poor basal cleavage is generally present.
Pleochroism of beryl is medium to weak (emerald, morganite, bixbite, vanadium beryl – shades
of body colour : aquamarine – body colour and near colourless ; maxixe and maxixe – type
show light –blue dichroism when viewed perpendicular to optic axis (aquamarine shows darker
34