| |
Comment on this article
Bling, in the rough
March/April 2009
Photograph ©Julie Brown

New York City gem dealer Benjamin Zucker '62 has an eye for fine jewelry. But he has never considered
submitting these nine uncut sapphires, each about an inch and a half long, to
the lapidary. Zucker says he bought the sapphires—now on display at the Peabody
Museum—in the mid-1970s "for their educational value." As a group, this
spectrum in crystal shows the wide range of colors that traces of iron,
titanium, and chromium can produce in sapphires.
Every sapphire is a variety
of corundum, a form of aluminum oxide that crystallizes under tremendous heat
and pressure. If, however, the corundum contains traces of chromium only, the
result is called a ruby. Alternatively, if the heat and pressure aren’t quite
right for creating precious stones, the result is garden-variety aluminum oxide
crystals. They make a very good sandpaper. 
|
|