Dictionary Definition
alexandrite n : a green variety of chrysoberyl
used as a gemstone
Extensive Definition
The mineral or gemstone chrysoberyl, not to be
confused with beryl, is an
aluminate of beryllium with the formula
BeAl2O4. The name chrysoberyl is derived from the Greek
words chrysos and beryllos, meaning "a gold-white spar". Despite
the similarity of their names, chrysoberyl and beryl are two
completely different gemstones. Chrysoberyl is the fourth-hardest
natural gemstone and lies between corundum and topaz on the hardness
scale. Chrysoberyl is a mineral consisting of ordinary
colorless or yellow transparent chrysoberyl, cymophane (chrysoberyl
cat's eye), and alexandrite.
An interesting feature of its crystals are the
cyclic
twins called trillings. These twinned crystals have a hexagonal
appearance, but are the result of a triplet of twins with each
"twin" taking up 120 degrees of the cyclic trilling.
There are three main varieties of chrysoberyl:
ordinary yellow chrysoberyl, cat's eye or cymophane, and
alexandrite. Although yellow chrysoberyl was referred to as
chrysolite during the Victorian and Edwardian eras, that name is no
longer used in the gemological nomenclature.
Ordinary chrysoberyl is a yellowish-green,
transparent to translucent chrysoberyl and has often been referred
to in the literature as chrysolite due to the common olive color of
many of its gems, but that name is no longer used in the
gemological nomenclature. When the mineral exhibits good pale green
to yellow color and is transparent, then it is used as a
gemstone.
Alexandrite, a strongly pleochroic (trichroic) gem,
will exhibit emerald green, red and orange-yellow colors and tend
to change color in artificial light compared to daylight. The color
change from red to green is due to strong absorption of light in
the yellow and blue portions of the spectrum. Typically,
alexandrite has an emerald-green color in daylight but exhibit a
raspberry-red color in incandescent light.
Cymophane is popularly known as cat's eye. This
variety exhibits pleasing chatoyant or opalescence that
reminds one of an eye of a cat. When cut to produce a cabochon, the
mineral forms a light-green specimen with a silky band of light
extending across the surface of the stone.
Occurrence
Chrysoberyl was formed as a result of pegmatitic processes that occurred at least 250 million years ago. High temperatures and pressures from the outer layers of the earth's mantle forced molten magma towards the surface. As the main magma body cooled, water originally present in low concentrations became more concentrated in the molten rock because it could not be incorporated into the crystallization of the localized minerals. Consequently, the remaining portion of the molten magma was water-rich. It was also rich in rare elements and silica that still had not solidified. When this water-rich magma was expelled in the final stages of the crystallization, it solidified in cracks and crevasses to form a pegmatite.If the pegmatite magma was rich in beryllium, crystals of
beryl and chrysoberyl
could form but for alexandrite to form, some chromium would also have had to
be present. Since beryllium and chromium are extremely rare
elements in rocks, this is the only known process which could have
concentrated these unusual elements in an environment where
crystallization could occur.
The high water content of the magma made it
possible for the crystals to grow quickly, so pegmatite crystals
are often quite large and this is of course important for gem
specimens. Chrysoberyl is always accompanied by quartz. It occurs
in granite pegmatites
and mica schists and in contact with
metamorphic deposits of dolomitic marble. It is also
recovered from river sands and gravels in alluvial deposits with
corundum, spinel, garnet, and tourmaline.
Chrysoberyl has high-enough specific gravity that
it will concentrate with black sands in active or paleoplacer
stream deposits and concentrate with other relatively heavy
minerals such as cassiterite, diamond, corundum, topaz, and garnet. When found in placers,
it will have rounded edges instead of sharp, wedge-shape forms.
Much of the chrysoberyl mined in Brazil and Sri Lanka is
recovered from placers as the host rocks have been intensely
weathered and eroded.
Chrysoberyl deposits can be divided into three
types, excluding rare dolomitic hosts. These include
chrysoberyl in pegmatites intruded into ultramafic rocks,
chrysoberyl hosted by pegmatites intruded into aluminous rocks, and
chrysoberyl found as a primary mineral in REE-pegmatites.
There have been very few research projects on the
genesis of chrysoberyl due to its rarity in primary host rocks
since most chrysoberyl is recovered from placers. However, it may
be hypothesized that in order to produce chrysoberyl, metamorphic
overprint of some beryllium- and aluminum-rich pegmatites may be
necessary.
Chrysoberyl
Chrysoberyl was discovered in 1789 and described
and named by Abraham
Gottlob Werner, in 1790. Werner worked at the Freiberg School
of Mining from 1790-1793 and was well known as one of the most
outstanding geologists of his time. He is best known today as the
loser in the battle of the Neptunists and Vulcanists that raged in
the 1780s.
Chrysoberyl is normally yellow, yellow-green, or
brownish with its color being caused by the presence of iron.
Spectroscopic analysis will usually reveal a strong band where the
violet takes over from the blue. As the color darkens from bright
yellowish-green to golden-yellow to brown, this band increases in
strength. When the stone has a strong color, two additional bands
can be seen in the green-blue. The most common inclusions are
liquid-filled cavities containing three-phase inclusions. Stepped
twin planes may be apparent in some cases. Some very rare minty
bluish-green chrysoberyls from Tanzania owe their color to the
presence of Vanadium.
Despite the similarity of their names,
chrysoberyl and beryl are two completely different gemstones.
Members of the beryl group include emerald, aquamarine, and
morganite while members of the chrysoberyl group include
chrysoberyl, cymophane (cat's eye), and alexandrite. Beryl is a silicate
and chrysoberyl is an oxide and although both beryl and chrysoberyl contain
beryllium, they are
separate gemstone species unrelated in any other way. Because of
the confusion between chrysoberyl and beryl, chrysoberyl is
relatively unknown in its own right and the alexandrite variety is
much more widely recognized. The only well-known natural gemstones
harder than chrysoberyl are corundum and diamond.
Alexandrite
The alexandrite variety displays a color change
(alexandrite effect) dependent upon light, along with strong
pleochroism.
Alexandrite results from small scale replacement of aluminium by
chromium oxide, which
is responsible for alexandrite's characteristic green to red color
change. Alexandrite from the Ural
Mountains in Russia is green by
daylight and red by incandescent light. Other varieties of
alexandrite may be yellowish or pink in daylight and a columbine
or raspberry red by
incandescent light. The optimum or "ideal" color change would be
fine emerald green to fine purplish red, but this is exceedingly
rare. Because of their rarity and the color change capability,
"ideal" alexandrite gems are some of the most expensive in the
world.
According to a widely popular but controversial
story, alexandrite was discovered by the Finnish mineralogist
Nils Gustaf Nordenskiöld, (1792 -1866) on the
tsarevitch Alexander's sixteenth birthday on April 17, 1834 and
named alexandrite in honor of the future Tsar Alexander
II of Russia. Sometimes,
Nils Gustaf Nordenskiöld is confused with his son,
Adolf Erik Nordenskjöld (1832–1901), also a famous Finnish
geologist, mineralogist and arctic explorer who accompanied his
father to the Ural Mountains to study the iron and copper mines at
Tagilsk in 1853. However, Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld was only two
years old when Alexandrite was discovered and only ten years old
when a description of the stone was published under the name of
Alexandrite for the first time.
Although it was Nordenskiöld who discovered
alexandrite, he could not possibly have discovered and named it on
Alexander's birthday. Nordenskiöld's initial discovery occurred as
a result of an examination of a newly found mineral sample he had
received from Perovskii, which he identified as emerald at first.
After the discovery of emeralds in the roots of an upturned tree,
the first emerald mine had been opened in 1831, not long before
Nordenskiöld had received this particular sample.
Confused with the high hardness however, he
decided to continue his examinations. Later that evening, while
looking at the specimen under candlelight, he was surprised to see
that the color of the stone had changed to raspberry-red instead of
green. Later, he confirmed the discovery of a new variety of
chrysoberyl, and suggested the name "diaphanite"
The finest alexandrites were found in the Ural
Mountains, the largest cut stones being in the 30 carat (6 g)
range, though many fine examples have been discovered in Sri Lanka (up
to 65 cts.), India (Andhra
Pradesh), Brazil, Myanmar, and
especially Zimbabwe (small
stones usually under 1 carat (200 mg) but with intense color
change). Overall, stones from any locale over 5 carats (1 g) would
be considered extremely rare, especially gems with fine color
change. Alexandrite is both hard and tough, making it very well
suited to wear in jewelry.
The gem has given rise to the adjective
"alexandritic", meaning any transparent gem or material which shows
a noted change in color between natural and incandescent light.
Some other gem varieties of which alexandritic specimens have been
found include sapphire,
garnet, and spinel.
Some gemstones described as lab-grown (synthetic)
alexandrite are actually corundum laced with trace elements (e.g.,
vanadium) or
color-change spinel and
are not actually chrysoberyl. As a result, they would be more
accurately described as simulated alexandrite rather than synthetic
but are often called Czochralski
Alexandrite after the process that grows the crystals.
Synthetic
alexandrite is used as an active
laser medium. Alexandrite laser crystals tend to be round, with
a pale brown tint.
Genuine alexandrite is one of the most expensive
gemstones available commercially, with the stronger color changes
being more highly valued. The following are average retail prices
for alexandrite in December 2004 from The International Gem
Society:
Faceted (Alexandrite)0.5 to 1 carat1 carat plus
Top Red/Green$5,000 to $15,000/ctto $100,000/ct Medium
Red/Green$3,000 to $9,000/ctto 60,000/ct Slight Red/Green$100 to
$2,500/ctto $6,000/ct Other colors$1,100 to $8,000/ctto $10,000/ct
Cabochon (Alexandrite)0.5 to 1 carat1 carat plus Strong
red/green$500 to $2,500/ctto $30,000/ct Cabochon (Cat's Eye)0.5 to
1 carat1 carat plus Strong red/green$1,500 to $5,000N/A
Cymophane
Translucent yellowish chatoyant chyrsoberyl is called cymophane or cat's eye. Cymophane has its derivation also from the Greek words meaning 'wave' and 'appearance', in reference to the chatoyancy sometimes exhibited. In this variety, microscopic tubelike cavities or needlelike inclusions of rutile occur in an orientation parallel to the c-axis producing a chatoyant effect visible as a single ray of light passing across the crystal. This effect is best seen in gemstones cut in cabochon form perpendicular to the c-axis. The color in yellow chrysoberyl is due to Fe3+ impurities.Although other minerals such as tourmaline, scapolite, corundum, spinel and quartz can form "cat's eye"
stones similar in appearance to cymophane, the jewelry industry
designates these stones as "quartz cat's eyes", or "ruby cat's
eyes" and only chrysoberyl can be referred to as "cat's eye" with
no other designation.
Gems lacking the silky inclusions required to
produce the cat's eye effect is usually faceted. An alexandrite
cat's eye is a chrysoberyl cat's eye that changes color. "Milk and
honey" is a term commonly used to describe the color of the best
cat's eyes. The effect refers to the sharp milky ray of white light
normally crossing the cabochon as a center line along its length
and overlying the honey colored background. The honey color is
considered to be top by many gemologists but the lemon yellow
colors are also popular and attractive. Cat's eye material is found
as a small percentage of the overall chrysoberyl production
wherever chrysoberyl is found.
Cat's eye really became popular by the end of the
19th century when the Duke of Connaught gave a ring with a cat's
eye as an engagement token, this was sufficient to make the stone
more popular and increase its value greatly. Up to that time cat's
eye had predominantly been present in gem and mineral collections.
The increased demand in its turn created an intensified search for
it in Ceylon . Early 20th century prices could go up as high as
$8000 for a cut stone.
References
External links
alexandrite in German: Chrysoberyll
alexandrite in Estonian: Krüsoberüll
alexandrite in Korean: 금록석
alexandrite in Italian: Crisoberillo
alexandrite in Hebrew: כריזובריל
alexandrite in Lithuanian: Chrizoberilas
alexandrite in Hungarian: Krizoberill
alexandrite in Dutch: Chrysoberyl
alexandrite in Japanese: 金緑石
alexandrite in Polish: Chryzoberyl
alexandrite in Russian: Хризоберилл
alexandrite in Serbian: Берилијум алуминат
alexandrite in Finnish: Krysoberylli
alexandrite in Thai:
อะเลกซานไดรต์