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Beryl (var. emerald)
Specimen | Catalog Number | Locality | Weight |
---|---|---|---|
Beryl (var. emerald) | NMNH 144930 | United States, North Carolina |
Emerald is the most valuable variety of the mineral beryl. Primarily green, it may also display tints of yellow or blue. Not enough green, and the stone will be classified as green beryl. Too much blue, and it will be called an aquamarine. Thus, the more pure green color the emerald displays, the more valuable it is. Its color is caused by impurity atoms of either chromium or vanadium, which are incorporated into beryl crystals as they grow. This emerald specimen was found at the Hiddenite and Emerald mine, near Stony Point, Alexander County, North Carolina in 1971.These crystals stand 11 cm tall and are among the finest emerald crystals known from North America. Rarely are emerald crystals of such size and superb color preserved; they are usually cut into gems.