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  1. Stones Used in Native American Indian Jewelry. "Native American Jewelry is most often associated with blue and green turquoise, but Indian craftsmen have been using stones and shells in bracelets, necklaces, earrings, rings and other hand made jewelry for a very long time. In our years of buying and selling new, vintage, pawn, and antique ...

  2. Coral - Coral is an organic gemstone in salmon-pink, orange, or red. Some call it “Moonga” or “Praval.”. Red coral, or precious coral, is the vivid pink to red material most often used for red stone jewelry. Crocoite - Crocoite is a cherry-red to saffron-colored gemstone with a yellow-orange streak.

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    • What Are The Different Types of Altered Turquoise?
    • Why Is Natural Turquoise So Much More expensive?
    • Should I Avoid Buying Stabilized Turquoise?
    • Is There A Difference Between American Turquoise and Non-American Turquoise?
    • What Accounts For The Price Differences Between Turquoise Mines?
    • Popular Non-American Turquoise
    Stabilized or Enhanced:An epoxy or a plastic filler is added via pressure to the stone.  If the stone naturally formed with holes or pits, they can be filled with epoxy for a smoother surface area....
    Reconstituted or Chalk:Fragments of turquoise are crushed into a powder form, which is then mixed with epoxy to make harder blocks that can then be cut into slabs or stone shapes. We do not sell, n...
    Block or Imitation:Synthetic material (dyed plastic) or the manipulation of another stone (such as the Howlite) made to look like turquoise, but with no actual turquoise stone in it at all. We do n...

    The price of natural turquoiseis associated with its rarity. When turquoise is mined, the majority is too soft for use in jewelry. This inexpensive low grade material must be stabilized before it can be used in jewelry. It’s estimated that as much as 90% of turquoise on the market today has been stabilized or enhanced. The lower grade the natural t...

    It’s important to distinguish the fact that buying stabilized turquoise isn’t buying a fake stone. Stabilization is a necessary process to make lower grade turquoise hard enough to be shaped. The cheapest forms of "turquoise" are block and imitation. These types of "turquoise" are made from synthetic materials - usually plastic. We caution buyers a...

    Natural turquoise is natural turquoise -- no matter where it is pulled out of the ground. Other areas of the world can offer high quality turquoise; most notably China and Iran ("Persian" Turquoise). Some high grade Chinese or Persian stones can be quite valuable and expensive to work with. In the case of Persian turquoise, the majority was importe...

    Hardness, appearance, and rarity are three major factors when valuing natural turquoise. The hardest turquoise stones are considered "gem grade". Appearance is a matter of personal taste; the color and matrix will vary drastically between different mines. Generally speaking, darker color and a tighter matrix are considered desirable traits. Rarity ...

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  4. Turquoise is always blue, green, or blue-green in color. If you find pink or purple shades or any other color that is not “turquoise” the stone is a fake and is not authentic Turquoise stone. If the gem feels light when you pick it up, it is fake. Many imitations are made from lightweight materials, whereas true Turquoise is dense and heavy.

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  5. Turquoise gemstone forms as a result of water (containing certain minerals and aluminum) leaking through a rock, then being subjected to heat and pressure. The turquoise stone forms as clumps or nuggets in cracks of porous rock, sometimes alongside other gemstones such as chrysocolla. As far as matrix value, that is up to personal preference.

  6. Sep 25, 2020 · Sediments–fine particles of clay and sand–built up over time, up to three miles thick, on the floor of the Belt Sea. Over many millions of years, these sediments sank and became compressed, forming the rock we know as argillite. About 170 million years ago, during the Jurassic period, two tectonic plates collided, creating a lot of folding ...

  7. Apr 1, 2021 · Turquoise: the ornamental blue stone that is becoming rarer with each passing year. Revered by Aztec kings and Egyptian pharaohs, and a sacred stone for the Native American people, turquoise has been prized for thousands of years. An opaque mineral with a waxy lustre that is worn as a gemstone and collected as an ornamental stone, it is ...

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