A gemstone is the naturally occurring crystalline form of a mineral which is desirable for its beauty, valuable in its rarity, and durable enough to be enjoyed for generations. There are more than 30 popular gem varieties and many more rare collector gemstones. Some varieties also come in a range of colors.
The Gem industry in Sri Lanka (also known as Ceylon, Serendib, etc..) has been in existence for over 2500 years. Some of the rarest of gem stones of exquisite beauty have taken pride of place, in the Crown jewels of Kings and Queens from time of Great Roamn Emperors.
Sapphire
Sapphire is an aluminum oxide. Its colour varies from very light to dark  blue to violetish-blue, bluish-green, yellow, slightly reddish-orange,  brown, nearly opaque black, colourless, pink, violet and the  pinkish-orange padparadscha (lotus flower).
Varieties 
Coloured varieties, star sapphire, alexandrite-like sapphire. 
Sources 
Sri Lanka, Kashmir (India), Burma, Thailand, Australia, Tanzania, Kenya, Montana, Madagascar 
Toughness 
Excellent, except in laminated or fractured stones. 
Precautions 
Sapphires may fade if heated 
Treatments 
Sapphires can be x-rayed to intensify their colour. Natural sapphires  undergo heat and diffusion treatments in Thailand. With the first  method, sapphires with latent chemical components for good colour are  "ripened" to a desirable colour through heating. In diffusion treatment,  sapphires that lack the components for good colour are placed in a bath  of colouring oxides that penetrate the outer layers of the stone.  Treatment of blue stones is permanent. 
History 
According to an ancient Persian legend, the earth rested on a great  sapphire whose reflection was seen in the sky. The stone also appears in  the Promethean legend. Prometheus was chained to a rock by Zeus for  having stolen fire from the gods. After being rescued by Hercules, a  link of the chain remained on his finger, and attached to it was a piece  of rock. Zeus agreed to grant Prometheus his freedom if he wore the  link as a reminder of his sin. Later a ring set with a sapphire replaced  the link and stone. Sapphire symbolizes truth, sincerity and constancy.  It was believed to protect the wearer against capture by an enemy, and  to win the favour of princesses. It also protected against poison. It  was said that if a poisonous snake were put in a vessel with a sapphire,  the rays from the gem would kill it. The name sapphire originally comes  from Sanskrit. It became sappheiros in Greek, meaning blue. Before the  value of sapphire was known to them, villages in the Zanzkar mountains  of Kashmir (India) used the gem as a flint to start fires. 
Cuts & Uses 
Faceted and en cabochon, usually mixed cut, beads, carved (poor  quality). Synthetic sapphire is used in watches, precision instruments  and electronic equipment. 
Ceylon Sapphires
The Ceylon Blue Sapphire is known for its beauty ? possessing the  glorious cornflower blue shade ? as well as for being one of the few  sapphires in the world that can be sold as a completely natural stone  without heat treatment. The blues aside, Ceylon sapphires also come in  beautiful hues including pink, yellow, orange, green, purple, lavender  and of course, the inimitable padparadscha sapphire ? named after the  lotus flower. All these highly marketable qualities of Ceylon sapphire  has created brand recognition world wide - a brand not created by the  producers of the stone, but by the sellers and consumers.
Sapphires that show a star-like light effect are called star sapphires; the most famous star sapphire from
Sri Lanka is displayed in the Museum of Natural History in New York.  Star sapphires or star rubies display a star-like marking and this  effect, commonly known as asterism, occurs when light falls on the cut  stone, cut in the cabochon form, and three rays appear giving a  six-point star. However, stones with six rays have also been known to  occur. 
Lastly, there is milky corundum, a white opaque form of corundum also  called geuda, which for many years was regarded as useless and  discarded, often ending up lining fish tanks in some gemstone merchant's  house. This happened until dealers in Thailand learned to heat-treat  geudas to change the colour of the stone from an unattractive cloudy  grey-white to a bright, sparkling blue. They completed the work nature  began and ended up with a blue sapphire - of much greater value than a  useless pebble. The colour of heat-treated blue sapphires are stable and  the chemical composition of the stone is that of a sapphire, although  prices are lower than for a similar quality stone with natural colour.
Choosing a Sapphire
The most famous sources for sapphire are Kashmir and Burma, (now known  as Myanmar). Kashmir sapphire, which was discovered in 1881 when a  landslide in the Himalayas uncovered beautiful blue pebbles, has a rich  velvety colour prized by connoisseurs. Burma sapphires, from the same  region that produces fabulous rubies, are also very fine. However,  today, these two sources account for a very small quantity of the  sapphire on the market. 
Most fine sapphire on the market today comes from Sri Lanka, which  produces a wide range of beautiful blues from delicate sky blue colours  to rich saturated hues. Kanchanaburi in Thailand and Pailin in Cambodia  are renowned for deep blue, even colours. Two relatively new mining  localities are showing promise: Madagascar, which has produced some  exceptionally fine stones in small sizes but has no organized mining  yet, and Tanzania, which has long produced sapphire in other colours but  is starting to produce blue colours as well from a new deposit in the  south. 
The most valuable sapphires have a medium intense, vivid blue colour.  The best sapphires hold the brightness of their colour under all  different types of lighting. Any black, grey, or green overtones mixed  in with the blue will reduce a stone's value. In general, a more pastel  blue would be less preferred than a vivid blue but would be priced  higher than an overly dark blackish-blue colour. As with all gemstones,  sapphires, which are "clean" and have few visible inclusions or tiny  flaws are the most valuable.
Sapphires are most often cut in a cushion shape - a rounded rectangle -  or an oval shape. You can also find smaller sapphires in round brilliant  cuts or a wide variety of fancy shapes, including triangles, squares,  emerald cuts, marquises, pear shapes, baguette shapes, cabochon cuts and  smooth domes. 
Ruby
Ruby is an aluminum oxide, a variety of corundum; it occurs in medium to dark tones of red and violetish-red to brownish-red
Varieties 
Star ruby 
Sources 
Sri Lanka, Burma, Thailand, Africa (Kenya, Madagascar, Tanzania), India. 
Toughness 
Excellent, except in laminated or fractured stones. 
Treatments 
The Burmese believed that "blazing red" stones could be found in a  "bottomless" valley. Natives threw pieces of meat into the valley,  hoping that some stones could then be recovered by killing the vultures.  In the Royal Collection of England, you can view a gold ring set with a  pale but nearly flawless ruby into which a portrait of Louis XII of  France is carved. 
Cuts & Uses 
Faceted or en cabochon, usually mixed cut (brilliant crown, step-cut pavilion), beads, carved (poor quality). 
Choosing a Ruby
The most important factor in the value of a ruby is colour. The top  qualities are as red as you can imagine: a saturated pure spectral hue  without any overtones of brown or blue. The word red is derived from the  Latin word for ruby, ruber, which is derived from similar words in  Persian, Hebrew, and Sanskrit. The intensity of colour of a fine ruby is  like a glowing coal, probably the most intensely coloured substance our  ancestors ever saw. It is no wonder they ascribed magical powers to  these fires that burned perpetually and never extinguished themselves.
Besides colour, other factors that influence the value of a ruby are  clarity, cut, and size. Rubies that are perfectly transparent, with no  tiny flaws, are more valuable than those with inclusions, which are  visible to the eye. Cut can make a big difference in how attractive and  lively a ruby appears to the eye. A well-cut stone should reflect  backlight evenly across the surface without a dark or washed-out area in  the centre that can result from a stone that is too deep or shallow.  The shape should also be symmetrical and there should not be any nicks  or scratches in the polish. Rubies and other gemstones are sold per  carat, a unit of weight equal to one-fifth of a gram. Larger rubies,  because they are more rare, will cost more per carat than smaller stones  of the same quality. 
The Ruby sometimes displays a three-ray, six-point star. These star  rubies are cut in a smooth domed cabochon cut to display the effect. The  star is most visible when illuminated with a single light source: it  moves across the stone as the light moves. This effect, called asterism,  is caused by light reflecting off tiny rutile needles, called "silk,"  which are oriented along the crystal faces. 
The value of star rubies and sapphires are influenced by two factors:  the intensity and attractiveness of the body colour and the strength and  sharpness of the star. All six legs should be straight and equally  prominent. Star rubies rarely have the combination of a fine translucent  or transparent colour and a sharp prominent star. These gems are  valuable and expensive. 
The most famous source of fine rubies is Burma, which is now called  Myanmar. The ruby mines of Myanmar date back to centuries ago: stone age  and bronze age mining tools have been found in the mining area of  Mogok. Rubies from the legendary mines in Mogok often have a pure red  colour, sometimes described as "pigeon's-blood", although that term is  more fanciful than an actual practical standard in the trade today.  Myanmar also produces intense pinkish red rubies, which are vivid and  extremely beautiful. Many of the rubies from Burma have a strong  fluorescence when exposed to ultraviolet rays like those in sunlight,  which layers on extra colour. Burma rubies have a reputation of holding  their vivid colour under all lighting conditions. 
Sri Lankan stones are often pinkish in hue and many are pastel in tone.  Some, however, resemble the vivid pinkish red hues from Burma. Rubies  from Kenya and Tanzania surprised the world when they were discovered in  the sixties because their colour rivals the world's best.  Unfortunately, most of the ruby production from these countries has many  inclusions, tiny flaws that diminish transparency. Rubies from the  African mines are rarely transparent enough to facet. However, their  fantastic colour is displayed to full advantage when cut in the cabochon  style. A few rare clean stones of top quality have been seen. 
Occasionally a few fine, top-quality rubies appear on the market from  Afghanistan, Pakistan or the Pamir Mountains of the Commonwealth of  Independent States. The terrain in these areas has made exploration for  gemstones very difficult but someday they may produce significant  quantities for the world market.
Alexandrite
Alexandrite is a variety of chrysoberyl, which ideally shows a distinct  colour change from green in fluorescent light or daylight to red in  incandescent light.
Varieties 
A very small amount of alexandrite shows a cat's eye effect (chatoyancy). 
Sources 
Sri Lanka, Tanzania, Soviet Russia, Brazil, Zimbabwe - Rhodesia, Burma. 
Toughness 
Excellent 
History 
Alexandrite received its name because it was discovered on the birthday of 
Czar Alexander II of Russia in 1830. Red and green are also the colours of the Russian Imperial Guard. 
Cuts & Uses 
Alexandrite is usually faceted. Chrysoberyl cat's eyes must be cut en cabochon to display a chatoyant effect. 
Star stones
Star stones of the corundum family are either star sapphires or rubies.  When light falls on these stones, a star effect is visible (known as  asterism). 
Sri Lanka is the best known source for star sapphires and star rubies.  Star sapphires range in colour from grey to bluish-grey and from medium  blue to medium dark blue. The very slightly purplish medium dark blue is  the best colour grade for star sapphires. Star rubies range from light  pink-red to purple-red through deep purple-red. The intense red star  rubies are extremely rare. A good quality star stone should have a high  degree of transparency and a well defined star with no weak or missing  rays. It should be reasonably clean and in the face-up position, no  distracting inclusions or cracks should be seen. There should be no  excess weight at the bottom of the stone. 
Star sapphires and rubies are hard stones (9 on the Moh?s scale), which  can take a high degree of polish and retain the shinefor a long time.  The special optical phenomenon of a well-defined six-ray star is a  fascinating sight. The wearable qualities of the star stones make them  suitable for men's rings. 
Chrysoberyl
The species name chrysoberyl is given to a transparent, faceted gemstone  that does not show a colour change between daylight and artificial  light (the chrysoberyl which shows a colour change is called  alexandrite). The ideal colours of chrysoberyl are green and  yellowish-green. In addition, due to strong dichroism, one may see an 
attractive bi-coloured chrysoberyl occasionally. Hardness is 8.5 on the  Moh's scale. The high refractive index of the stone makes it very lively  when properly cut and polished 
Cat's eye
A cat's eye like effect, known as 'chatoyancy', appears to move on this  stone's surface. Cat's eye is a gem variety of chrysoberyl. 
Hardness: 8.5 on the Mohs' scale.
There are generally two varieties of cat?s eye ? the alexandrite  cat?s-eye and the chrysoberyl cat?s-eye, which is very popular in the  Far East, particularly in Japan. The ideal colours of the chrysoberyl  cat?s-eye are yellowish-brown, which is called the honey colour, and the  yellow-green, which is called the apple green colour. A very good cat?s  eye, apart from being of ideal colour, should have a high degree of  transparency and a well-defined unbroken ray. It should be free from any  distracting inclusions visible to the unaided eye. The chrysoberyl  cat?s-eye is one of the most beautiful gemstones because of the  ?chatoyancy? or the eye effect. 
Description 
A translucent variety of chrysoberyl (beryllium aluminum oxide) which  exhibits a silvery white line across the stone. This moves as the stone,  the light source or the observer moves and may appear to open and close  like an eye. The finest quality has a sharp eye that appears to open  and close as the stone is rotated, and exhibits a strong "milk and  honey" effect (stone on one side of the eye appears lighter than the  other). These colours switch as the stone or light source is moved. The  most highly prized body colours are greenish-yellow and brownish-yellow  (honey colour). 
Varieties 
Rare specimens also exhibit change of colour. 
Sources Sri Lanka, Brazil. 
Phenomena 
Chatoyancy caused by the reflection of light off minute, parallel, needle-like rutile crystals or hollow tubes. 
Toughness 
Excellent 
Miscellaneous 
When a gem specimen exhibits both chatoyancy and change of colour, one  or both phenomena will suffer. It is more common to find a good eye with  poor change of colour. The conditions necessary for one phenomenon  conflict with those needed for the other. The term cat's eye when used  alone refers to chrysoberyl. Other minerals exhibiting chatoyancy must  be qualified, e.g. tourmaline cat's eye. 
History 
Cat's eye has been regarded as a preserver of good fortune. The natives  of Sri Lanka still consider it a charm against evil spirits. British  royalty often use it as an engagement stone. 
Cuts & Uses 
Must be cut in a cabochon to produce cat's eye effect. This should be  cut so that the long portion of the cabochon is 90 degrees to the  direction of the needles. 
Quartz
 | Quartz is the most common mineral on the face of the Earth. Gem  varieties include amethyst (purple), citrine (yellow), milky quartz  (cloudy, white variety), rock crystal (clear variety), rose quartz (pink  to reddish-pink variety), and smokey quartz (brown to grey variety). 
 Gem varieties of quartz include: citrine, amethyst, rock crystal, rose  quartz, and smokey quartz. There are also varieties of Quartz cat's eye.
 
 Colours: citrine (yellow); amethyst (purple); rock crystal (colourless);  rose quartz (pink); and smokey quartz (purplish-brown).
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Amethyst
Description 
A variety of quartz, silicon dioxide, which appears to be dark purple in transparent light. 
Varieties 
None 
Sources 
Sri Lanka, Brazil, Uruguay, Russia, Mexico, Zimbabwe - Rhodesia, Zambia, Arizona. 
Toughness 
Good 
History 
The word amethyst comes from the Greek amethustos meaning "not drunk".  Therefore, it has been considered a charm against intoxication. A legend  accounts for the origin of the stone. Supposedly, Bacchus, the god of  wine and conviviality, grew angry at a slight and swore revenge. He  decreed that the first mortal to come across his path was to be eaten by  tigers. Amethyst, a beautiful maiden on her way to worship at the  shrine of Diana, happened to be the victim. Diana, the huntress, changed  Amethyst into colourless quartz to protect her from the tigers. When  Bacchus witnessed the miracle, he repented and poured wine over the  stone, staining it purple. The wine failed to cover the entire stone  evenly, and the feet and part of the legs remained clear crystal. So, in  keeping with the legend, amethyst crystals are usually uneven in colour  with a colourless base. 
Cuts & Uses Must be cut in a cabochon to produce cat's eye effect.  This should be cut so that the long portion of the cabochon is 90  degrees to the direction of the needles. 
Citrine
Description 
A transparent variety of quartz, silicon dioxide, occurring in yellow to  red-orange to orange-brown. The name is derived from citron, which is  French for lemon. 
Varieties 
Madeira (deep, bright reddish-brown) and Palmyra (medium yellowish-brown) are terms used in the trade. 
Sources 
Brazil, Madagascar, Russia, Sri Lanka. 
Toughness 
Good 
Treatments 
Poor quality amethyst is often heat-treated to achieve a desirable citrine colour. 
Cuts & Uses 
Usually fashioned into ring and pendant stones. The per carat value of  cut citrine usually decreases beyond the size of an average ring stone. 
Aquamarine
 | Aquamarine is a blue to greenish-blue or bluish-green variety of beryl. 
 Varieties
 May occasionally exhibit a cat's eye effect (chatoyancy).
 
 Sources
 Sri Lanka, Brazil, Madagascar (only historically), Tanzania, Russia, Kenya, Afghanistan, Nigeria.
 
 Toughness
 Good
 
 Treatments
 Almost all aquamarine is heat-treated to enhance its blue colour.  Irradiation with neutron, gamma rays or with x-rays. Colour change is  permanent and is an accepted practice. A morganite (pink beryl) turns  deep purple blue (Maxixe type) upon ultraviolet irradiation, though the  colour is not stable.
 
 History
 The word aquamarine comes from the Latin for sea water. In 1910 a 243  lb. crystal was found in Brazil. The outside was greenish and the inside  was blue. It sold for $25,000 and was cut into many high quality gems.  The American Museum of Natural History has a 13 lb. uncut piece of the  green outside portion.
 
 Cuts & Uses
 The step-cut is the most popular because it accentuates the colour. As  it is often found in large, flawless, even-colored crystals, it is  frequently used in pendants and rings. Given a piece of rough with a  certain colour intensity, the larger stones cut from it will exhibit  deeper colour.
 Other Information Aquamarine is the blue, or perhaps more correctly,  blue-green or aqua variety of the mineral beryl. Other gemstone colour  varieties that belong to beryl include emerald, morganite, and heliodor.  Other colours of beryl are simply referred to by their colour, such as  red beryl. Most gem aquamarines have been heat treated to produce the  popular blue-green varieties from less desirable yellow or pale stones.
 | 
 

Garnet
A group of gemstones occurring in every colour but blue. One of earth's  most common minerals, though only a small portion is considered gem  quality. 
Species 
Rhodolite- violet to purplish-red;
Almandite - red, brownish-red, violetish-red or purple;
Pyrope ? red;
Grossularite - green, yellow, brown, white, colourless, light violet,  red, orangey-red; Varieties: hessonite (orange to brown), transparent,  green, grossularite (tsavorite);
Some show a colour change from a mauve-brown to orange-red. 
Andradite - green, yellow, black. Green called demantoid (high lustre and dispersion);
Spessartite - yellow to yellow-brown, dark orangey-brown, reddish-orange, orange;
Uvarovite - emerald green, found only in tiny sizes, usually opaque. 
Sources 
Rhodolite - Sri Lanka, North Carolina, Tanzania, Kenya, South Africa, Brazil. 
Almandite - Sri Lanka, India, Brazil, star from Idaho - USA. 
Pyrope - Czechoslovakia, South Africa, Zimbabwe - Rhodesia, Brazil, Arizona. 
Grossularite - Sri Lanka, Brazil, Tanzania, Kenya, South Africa, Canada. 
Andradite - demantoid: Russia, Italy; translucent yellowish or greenish-brown, Arizona. 
Spessartite - Sri Lanka, Burma, Brazil, Madagascar, Tanzania, Kenya. 
Uvarovite - Russia, Finland (hardly mined at all). 
Toughness 
Fair to good 
History 
Since earliest times garnets have been carried as amulets against  accidents in travel. Asiatic peoples and even our Southwest Indians used  them as bullets, believing that their rich, glowing colour might cause  more deadly wounds. The Persians have given the garnet a favoured place  as a royal stone, allowing it to bear their sovereign's image. Red  garnet was once used to relieve fever, yellow garnet to cure jaundice.  If the powder failed, the apothecary was accused of using a substitute. 
Cuts & Uses 
Usually faceted. Sometimes carved into intaglios. 
Tourmaline
Tourmaline is a group of minerals comprised of a complex boron-aluminum  silicate with one or more of the following: magnesium, sodium, lithium,  iron, potassium or other metals. It appears in light from dark red to  purple as well as brownish variations of these hues - light to dark  green, yellowish-green, greenish-yellow, brownish-orange. It also grows  bi-coloured. 
Varieties 
Bi-coloured, watermelon, cat's eye, alexandrite-like (rare) . 
Sources 
Sri Lanka, Brazil, USA (California, Maine), Madagascar, Tanzania, Kenya, Russia, Afghanistan, Pakistan (prime new source). 
History 
Dutch children played with tourmaline because of its ability to attract  light objects. The stones were called "aschentrekkers" (ash drawers). 
Cuts & Uses 
Any cut may be used. Some are carved, some fashioned into beads. Cat's  eye are always cut en cabochon. Sometimes carved to make use of more  than one colour. 
Spinel
A magnesium aluminum oxide which occurs in all colours, ruby-red being  the most popular. Most colours are greyed out. Gahno-spinel is a dark  blue or greenish-blue spinel with high zinc content. 
Varieties 
Star material is very rare. 
Sources 
Sri Lanka, Burma, Minor-Anatolia, Afghanistan, Brazil, Thailand, Australia. 
Toughness Good 
History 
Two of the stones among the Crown Jewels of England are spinels,  although they were once thought to be rubies. They are the Black  Prince's Ruby and the Timur Ruby. The 361 carat Timur Ruby is the  world's most famous spinel. Spinel was recognized as a separate species  as early as 1587 in Burma. 
Cuts & Uses 
Usually faceted. 
Topaz
Topaz is a fluosilicate of aluminum, occurring in transparent yellow,  yellow-brown, orange-brown, light to almost medium red, very light to  light blue, very light green and violet colours.
Varieties 
Coloured varieties, Imperial (reddish-orange), chatoyant material (very rare). 
Sources 
Prime source is Brazil. Sri Lanka (blue), Mexico (mostly poor quality,  brownish-yellow), Russia, South Africa (blue), Utah, Afghanistan. 
Toughness 
Poor, extremely easy basal cleavage - treat with care. 
History 
The stone began to be used in Marco Polo's time (13th century). Topaz  mounted in gold and hung around the neck was believed to dispel  enchantment. When the powdered stone was put in wine, it was considered a  cure for asthma, insomnia, burns and haemorrhages. Topaz was supposed  to become obscure in contact with poison and to quench the heat of  boiling water. All these powers were believed to be increased or  decreased with the changes of the moon. 
Cuts & Uses 
Usually faceted, often mixed cut due to long prismatic shape of crystal;  some stones cut as longish oval or pendeloque stones. The moderately  rich colored stones are emerald cut.
Moonstone
Moonstones are usually colourless to white, semi-transparent to  translucent, and characterised by a glowing light effect known as  adularescence, the visibility of which is confined to a restricted angle  of view. The most valuable of the feldspar gems.
Varieties 
Some may exhibit cat's eye effect. 
Sources 
Sri Lanka, Switzerland, Burma, United States, Madagascar, Tanzania. 
Phenomena Adularescence- a glowing effect, the finest of which is  bluish. Finest quality moonstone is semi-transparent; poorest is  translucent. Occasionally a sharp cat's eye may be present. 
Toughness 
Poor 
History 
Considered a love charm, moonstone has been attributed the power to  arouse tender passions and foretell the future. Therapeutic qualities  include protection from lunacy, appeaser of anger and relief from fever.  
Cuts & Uses 
Usually en cabochon, sometimes carved into cameos. Generally used as an inexpensive stone for rings, pendants, etc.
Zircon
Zircon is a zirconium silicate, occurring in colourless, light blue,  brownish-orange, yellow, yellowish-green, brownish-green, dark red or  light red-violet. Blue is the most valuable. This stone is usually  heat-treated. 
Varieties 
High, medium and low property. 
Sources 
Sri Lanka, Burma, Cambodia, Thailand. 
Precautions Avoid heat. Boiling and steaming not recommended. 
History 
The terms hyacinth or jacinth were often applied to the reddish-brown  zircon. During the Middle Ages, hyacinth was claimed to have the power  of inducing sleep, of promoting riches, honour and wisdom and of driving  away plagues and evil spirits. The pale yellow to colourless stones  from Ceylon (Sri Lanka) were called jargoons. 
Cuts & Uses 
The round brilliant cut is most successful, standard 57-facets with no culet. 
 
Peridot
Peridot is a silicate of magnesium and iron, occurring in  yellowish-green, green, greenish-yellow, brownish-green and brown (all  transparent). 
Varieties 
Peridot top grades: medium to dark, slightly yellowish-green. Chrysolite  ? greenish-yellow, light to dark yellowish-green to brownish-green to  almost brown. 
Sources 
Sri Lanka, Island of Zeberget (Egypt), Burma, USA, Mexico. 
Toughness 
Fair to good 
History 
The ancients called it the "gem of the sun." They attributed to it the  power to dispel enchantment and evil spirits due to its association with  the sun (which drives away darkness). In order to be worn as a  talisman, it had to be set in gold. The Red Sea island of Zeberget, off  the southern tip of Egypt, was worked for this stone as early as 1500  B.C. At that time, the island was known as "The Island of Serpents,"  because it was infested with poisonous snakes. Later, the reigning  Egyptian king had the snakes destroyed to facilitate prospecting for  peridot. Prospecting was done at night because the gem could not be seen  in sunlight. The workers would mark the spots and return the next day  to dig them out. 
Cuts & Uses 
Usually faceted. Step-cut is best; oval, round and pendeloque cuts are  common. Very suitable for brooches, pendants, earrings, but not for  rings or bracelets because it abrades easily.
Blue Giant of the Orient (466 carats)
Mined in Kuruwita in 1907, this giant blue sapphire is one of the  world's most valuable gemstones. In rough, it was said to have been over  600 carats and was fashioned into a jewel of 466 carats. It is the  largest blue sapphire in the world. This gem is in the collection of an  American gem and art collector. 
Logan Blue Sapphire (423 carats)
 | Considered to be the second largest blue sapphire in the world on  record. A flawless specimen with a rich deep blue, the stone was gifted  to The Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC by John Logan. | 
 
Star of India (563 carats)
The second largest star sapphire in the world was discovered in Sri  Lanka. It is almost flawless and unusual in that it has stars on both  sides of the stone. Part of the collection of the American Museum of  Natural history. 
Star of Lanka (362 carats)
Third largest star sapphire on record. The phenomenal stone is a rich  deep-blue in colour and has a well-defined six-ray star. Owned by the  National Gem & Jewellery Authority in Sri Lanka. 
Rosser Reeves Star Ruby (138 carats)
The world's largest star ruby combining excellent colour, good  transparency and a well-defined star. Part of the United States National  Gem Collection at the Smithsonian Institute. 
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