ENHANCEMENTS
Recent television presentations have raised the issue that some gemstones
may have been through a treatment process to enhance their appearance. We want you to know more about
those procedures and how they affect your gem's look and value.
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The treatment of a gemstone to improve its looks is nothing new. In
fact, some of the earliest published manuscripts detail instructions on how to improve the color and clarity
of various stones. Papyrus Gaecus Hulmiensis listed instructions about gemstone enhancements in a treatise
dated 400 AD. And C. Pliny's "Natural History" published in 1548 goes into great depth about such
procedures. It should be pointed out that even the cutting and polishing of rough mineral specimens into
a faceted gem is a form of treatment.
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The ancient treatments described were very basic, and by today's standards almost
comical. The early procedures ranged from feeding pearls to a rooster, and letting it pass through his digestive
system to improve the pearl's color, to boiling gemstones in garlic oil to aid in removing inclusions. Although
these techniques were very basic, variations of many of those antique practices are still used today, although in a
more scientific manner.
Of all the assorted treatments, there are three basic treatments that you should know about prior to selecting a
gemstone for purchase. Heating, sealing, and irradiating are the primary methods used by the modern jewelry
industry to enhance the appearance of a gem.
HEAT TREATMENT
Long ago, miners discovered that if a rough piece of gem material was tossed into the
fire and left overnight, the color would often improve. Usually this color improvement was accompanied by severe
heat fracturing of the stone. They soon discovered that by placing the stones into a clay pot filled with mud, the
heating and cooling process occurred gradually, and the stones were much less likely to fracture. Today gemologists
use kilns, like the furnaces used by a ceramics worker, to heat treat gems. Computer controlled thermostats on
these ovens are adjusted to bring the stone slowly up to the desired temperature, then return the temperature slowly
back to normal. In some high-tech furnaces the oxygen in the kiln is removed and replaced with special gasses
to increase the range of alteration in the stone being treated.
Aquamarines, for example, are heated to reduce the green hue in the gem, but the heating
does not deepen the level of blue. Dark blue or black sapphires are heated to lighten their color to a more
pleasing shade of blue. Pale colored amethysts are heated and turned yellow, to be sold as
citrine. Greeninsh-gray zosites are heated to turn them into Tanzanite. All of these changes can make
significant improvements in a stone's appearance, creating gems with wider market appeal.
Heat treating typically causes a permanent change in the stone's color, and the gem
should not require any special handling on the part of the owner thereafter.
FRACTURE FILLING
The sealing of a gem is an attempt to fill tiny cavities or cracks that break the
surface of the polished stone. In earlier times sealing was done with grease or wax, and then later with natural
hardening oils, such as the oils used to finish wood furniture. Of these early treatments the only one still used
in any significant measure today is oiling, a process which is still widely used on emeralds. Advanced sealing
methods came into use when the dental industry began to use epoxy sealers on teeth to help prevent cavities.
HHigh-tech, epoxy sealers are relatively durable, and can be used to fill larger cracks
or craters on a stone's surface. The typical method is to place the stones in an epoxy liquid, then pressurize the
container to drive the epoxy deep into the cracks. After removing the stone from the epoxy the surface is wiped
clean, then painted with the catalyst to harden the epoxy which remains in the cracks or crevices of the stone. These
pressurized treatments can make dramatic improvements in the clarity of a gem, and in the case of emeralds, to create
desirable gems, at affordable prices. In the case of lapis and turquoise, without some type of surface sealer these
stones would be of marginal use in jewelry -- they could easily become stained by even hand soap or lotions if used
for jewelry in their unsealed form.
IRRADIATION
Irradiation is the treatment which has no ancient history in the gem world. The
use of linear accelerators operated by scientists can make complete changes in a stone's color. Blue topaz is
mined from the ground in either a clear, or undesirable brown color. After some possible heating, the topaz
material is irradiation treated and turned into one of several shades of blue. Near colorless Kunzite can
be turned into intense hot pink colors, and tourmalines into vivid shades of red or pink. On some gems the
effects of irradiation treatment may not be permanent. In the case of kunzite, exposure to direct sunlight for
several weeks can turn a vivid colored stone back into a near colorless gem.
SURFACE COLORING
One last treatment you should know about is surface coloring. Lapis, turquoise,
pearls and some additional opaque gems can be dyed to deepen, or change their color. &nbps;Diffusion treatment, the
melting of a thin color layer onto the surface of colorless sapphire, can result in a gem of fine appearance, but with
a clear center. A small chip or scratch in these diffusion stone reveals their clear center.
Don't always expect your gem sales person to be fully knowledgeable of, or
completely willing to disclose the variety of treatments a gem may have experienced. An informed buyer is the
best customer.