From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A pearl is a hard, rounded object produced by certain
animals, primarily
mollusks such as
oysters.
Pearls can be used in jewelry and also crushed in cosmetics or paint.
Pearl is valued as a
gemstone and is cultivated or harvested for
jewellery. The pearl is also the
birthstone of June.
Pearls are formed inside the shell of certain
bivalve
mollusks. As a response to an irritating object inside its shell, the
mollusk will deposit layers of
calcium carbonate (CaCO3) in the form of the
minerals
aragonite or
calcite
(both crystalline forms of calcium carbonate) held together by an
organic horn-like compound called
conchiolin. This combination of calcium carbonate and conchiolin
is called
nacre, or as most know it,
mother-of-pearl.
The unique
lustre of pearls depends upon the
reflection and
refraction of light from the translucent layers and is finer in
proportion as the layers become thinner and more numerous. The
iridescence that some pearls display is caused by the overlapping
of successive layers, which breaks up light falling on the surface.
Pearls are usually white, sometimes with a creamy or pinkish tinge,
but may be tinted with yellow, green, blue, brown, purple, or black.
Black pearls, frequently referred to as Black Tahitian
Pearls are highly valued because of their rarity; the culturing
process for them dictates a smaller volume output and can never be
mass produced. This is due to bad health and/or non-survival of the
process, rejection of the nucleus (the small object such as a tiny
fish, grain of sand or crab that slips naturally inside an oyster's
shell or inserted by a human), and their sensitivity to changing
climatic and ocean conditions.
History
Pearl farm, Seram, Indonesia
Before the beginning of the
20th Century,
pearl hunting was the most common way of harvesting pearls. Divers
manually pulled oysters from ocean floors and river bottoms and
checked them individually for pearls. Not all natural oysters produce
pearls, however. In fact, in a haul of three tonnes, only three or
four oysters will produce perfect pearls.
Now, however, almost all pearls used for jewelry are cultured by
planting a core or nucleus into
pearl oysters. The pearls are usually harvested three years after
the planting, but it can take up to as long as six years before a
pearl is produced. This
mariculture process was first developed by
Kokichi Mikimoto in
Japan,
who was granted a
patent
for the process in
1896. The
nucleus is generally a polished bead made from
mussel
shell. Along with a small scrap of mantle tissue from another oyster
to serve as an irritant, it is surgically implanted near the oyster's
genitals. Oysters which survive the subsequent surgery to remove the
finished pearl are often implanted with a new, larger nucleus as part
of the same procedure and then returned to the water for another three
years of growth.
The original Japanese cultured pearls, known as Akoya pearls, are
produced by a species of small oysters no bigger than 6 to 7 cm in
size, hence Japanese pearls larger than 10 mm in diameter are
extremely rare and highly prized. In the past couple of decades,
cultured pearls have been produced with larger oysters in the south
Pacific and
Indian Ocean. One of the largest pearl-bearing oysters is the
Pinctada maxima, which is roughly the size of a dinner plate.
South Sea pearls are characterized by their large size and silvery
color. Sizes up to 14 mm in diameter are not uncommon.
Australia is one of the most important sources of South Sea
pearls.
Tahitian pearls (also referred to as
Titian
pearls) are also another South Sea pearl.
In 1914 pearl farmers began culturing freshwater pearls using the
pearl mussels native to Lake Biwa. This lake, the largest and most
ancient in Japan, lies near the city of Kyoto. The extensive and
successful use of the Biwa Pearl Mussel is reflected in the name "Biwa
pearls," a phrase nearly synonymous with freshwater pearls in general.
Since the time of peak production in 1971, when Biwa pearl farmers
produced six tons of cultured pearls, pollution and overharvesting
have caused the virtual extinction of this animal. Japanese pearl
farmers now culture a hybrid pearl mussel—a cross between the last
remaining Biwa Pearl Mussels and a closely related species from
China—in other Japanese lakes.
In the
1990s, Japanese pearl producers also invested in producing
cultured pearls with
freshwater mussels in the region of
Shanghai,
China,
and in Fiji.
Freshwater pearls are characterized by the reflection of rainbow
colors in the luster. Cultured pearls are also produced using
abalone.
Jewelry
The girl with the pearl earring, by Jan Vermeer van Delft
The value of the pearls in jewelry is determined by a combination
of the luster, color, size, lack of surface flaw and symmetry that are
appropriate for the type of pearl under consideration. Among those
attributes, luster is the most important differentiator of pearl
quality according to jewelers. All factors being equal, however, the
larger the pearl the more valuable it is. Large, perfectly round
pearls are rare and highly valued. Teardrop-shaped pearls are often
used in pendants. Irregular shaped pearls are often used in necklaces.
Pearls come in eight basic shapes: round, semi-round, button, drop,
pear, oval, baroque, and ringed. Perfectly round pearls are the rarest
and most expensive, and are generally used in necklaces, or strings of
pearls. Semi-rounds are also used in necklaces or in pieces where the
shape of the pearl can be disguised to look like it is a perfectly
round pearl. Button pearls are like a slightly flattened round pearl
and can also make a necklace, but are more often used in single
pendants or earrings where the back half of the pearl is covered,
making it look like a larger, round pearl.
Woman with a pearl necklace, by Jan Vermeer van Delft
Drop and pear shaped pearls are sometimes referred to as teardrop
pearls and are most often seen in earrings, pendants, or as a center
pearl in a necklace. Baroque pearls have a different appeal to them
than more standard shapes because they are often highly irregular and
make unique and interesting shapes. They are also commonly seen in
necklaces. Ringed pearls are characterized by concentric ridges, or
rings, around the body of the pearl.
In general, cultivated pearls are less valuable than natural
pearls, and imitation pearls are the least expensive. One way that
jewellers can determine whether a pearl is cultivated or natural is by
x-raying the pearl. If the grit in the centre of the pearl is a
perfect sphere, then the jeweller knows it is cultivated. This is
because when the cultivators insert the grit, (usually a polished
piece of
mussel shell), it is always pefectly round, so as to produce a
more expensive, perfectly round pearl. If the centre is not perfectly
round, the jeweller recognises that it is genuine, and gives it a
higher value. Imitation pearls are much easier to identify by
jewellers. Some imitation pearls are simply made of
mother-of-pearl,
coral
or conch,
while others are made from glass and are coated with a solution
containing fish scales called
essence d'Orient. Although imitation pearls look the part, they do
not have the same weight or smoothness as real pearls, and their
luster will also dim greatly.
Pearl Market in Beijing, China
There is also a unique way of naming pearl necklaces. While most
other necklaces are simply referred to by their physical measurement,
strings of pearls have their own set of names that characterize the
pearls based on where they hang when worn around the neck. A collar
will sit directly against the throat and not hang down the neck at
all, they are often made up of multiple strands of pearls. Pearl
chokers nestle just at the base of the neck. The size called a
princess comes down to or just below the collarbone. A matinee
of pearls falls just above the breasts. An opera will be
long enough to reach the breastbone or sternum of the wearer, and
longer still, a pearl rope is any length that falls down
further than an opera.
Necklaces can also be classified as uniform, where all the pearls
are the same size, graduated, where the pearls are arranged in size
from large in the centre to smaller at the ends, or tin cup, where
pearls are generally the same size, but separated by lengths of chain.
Religious references
According to
Rebbenu Bachya, the word "Yahalom" in the verse
Exodus
28:18 means "Pearl" and was the stone on the
Ephod
representing the tribe of
Zebulun.
In a
parable,
Jesus
compared the
Kingdom of Heaven to a
Pearl of Great Price.
The
Vedic tradition describes the sacred
Nine Pearls which were first documented in the
Garuda Purana, one of the books of Hindu holy text
Atharvaveda.
See also