Gem-Stones and Their Distinctive Characters
PLATE I Frontispiece
GEM-STONES
BY G. F. HERBERT SMITH M.A., D.Sc. OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM (NATURAL HISTORY)
WITH MANY DIAGRAMS AND THIRTY-TWO PLATES OF WHICH THREE ARE IN COLOUR
THIRD EDITION
METHUEN & CO. LTD. 36 ESSEX STREET W.C. LONDON
First Published March 21st 1910 Second Edition June 1913 Third Edition 1919
IN this edition the opportunity has been taken to correct a few misprints and mistakes that have been discovered in the first, and to alter slightly one or two paragraphs, but otherwise no change has been made.
G. F. H. S.
Wandsworth Common, S.W.
PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION
IT has been my endeavour to provide in this book a concise, yet sufficiently complete, account of the physical characters of the mineral species which find service in jewellery, and of the methods available for determining their principal physical constants to enable a reader, even if previously unacquainted with the subject, to have at hand all the information requisite for the sure identification of any cut stone which may be met with. For several reasons I have dealt somewhat more fully with the branches of science closely connected with the properties of crystallized matter than has been customary hitherto in even the most comprehensive books on precious stones. Recent years have witnessed many changes in the jewellery world. Gem-stones are no longer entirely drawn from a few well-marked mineral species, which are, on the whole, easily distinguishable from one another, and it becomes increasingly difficult for even the most experienced eye to recognize a cut stone with unerring certainty. So long as the only confusion lay between precious stones and paste imitations an ordinary file was the solitary piece of apparatus required by the jeweller, but now recourse must be had to more discriminative tests, such as the refractive index or the specific gravity, the determination of which calls for a little knowledge and skill. Concurrently, a keener interest is being taken in the scientific aspect of gem-stones by the public at large, who are attracted to them mainly by æsthetic considerations.
George Frederick Herbert Smith
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CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
(1) The Method of Total-Reflection
(2) The Method of Minimum Deviation
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
Colour
Dichroism
Absorption Spectra
CHAPTER VIII
(1) Heavy Liquids
(2) Direct Weighing
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
CHAPTER XVIII
(1) Koh-i-nor
(2) Pitt or Regent
(3) Orloff
(4) Great Mogul
(5) Sancy
(6) Great Table
(7) Moon of the Mountains
(8) Nizam
(9) Darya-i-nor
(10) Shah
(11) Akbar Shah, or Jehan Ghir Shah
(12) Polar Star
(13) Nassak
(14) Napoleon
(15) Cumberland
(16) Pigott
(17) Eugénie
(18) White Saxon
(19) Pacha of Egypt
(20) Star of Este
(21) Tuscany, or Austrian Yellow
(22) Star of the South
(23) English Dresden
(24) Star of South Africa
(25) Stewart
(26) Porter-Rhodes
(27) Imperial, Victoria, or Great White
(28) De Beers
(29) Excelsior
(30) Jubilee
(31) Star of Africa, or Cullinan
(32) Star of Minas
(1) Hope
(2) Dresden
(3) Paul I
(4) Tiffany
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXII
CHAPTER XXIII
CHAPTER XXIV
CHAPTER XXV
CHAPTER XXVI
CHAPTER XXVII
CHAPTER XXVIII
CHAPTER XXIX
CHAPTER XXX
CHAPTER XXXI
CHAPTER XXXII
CHAPTER XXXIII
CHAPTER XXXIV
Spodumene
Iolite
Benitoite
CHAPTER XXXV
Euclase
Phenakite
Beryllonite
CHAPTER XXXVI
Enstatite
Diopside
Kyanite
Andalusite
Idocrase
Epidote
Sphene
Axinite
Prehnite
Apatite
Dioptase
CHAPTER XXXVII
Cassiterite
Anatase
Pyrites, Hematite
CHAPTER XXXVIII
CHAPTER XXXIX
CHAPTER XL
Pearl
Coral
Amber
TABLE I
TABLE II
TABLE III
TABLE IV
TABLE V
TABLE VI
TABLE VII
TABLE VIII
TABLE IX.—Data
INDEX
FOOTNOTES: