From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
-
Peridot from the
San Carlos Apache reservation in Arizona.
Peridot (pronounced
pear-e-doe) is the gem quality variety of forsterite olivine.
It is bright yellow-green in color, and has a hardness of 6.5 on
Mohs scale. The chemical composition of peridot is (Mg, Fe)2SiO4.
Peridot is one of the few gemstones that come in only one color. The
depth of green depends on how much iron is contained in the crystal
structure, and varies from yellow-green to olive to brownish green.
Peridot is also often referred to as "poor man's emerald". Olivine
is a very abundant mineral, but gem quality peridot is rather rare.
Peridot crystals have been collected from iron-nickel meteorites.
Peridot is found in Arizona,
Hawaii, Nevada, and New Mexico, in the US, and in Australia, Brazil,
China, Kenya, Mexico, Myanmar (Burma), Norway, Pakistan, South
Africa, Sri Lanka, and Tanzania. Peridot of high quality is
commercially mined in the eastern lava fields of Saudi Arabia. The
largest cut peridot is a 310 carat (62 g) specimen in the
Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C.. A special variety of peridot
from Pakistan is known as "Cashmere" peridot. Due to the large size
of the rough stones found there, cutters have successfully created
faceted stones of over 100 carats (20 g) from the rough gems of this
area.
It is the birthstone for the
month of August. According to folklore, the peridot will bring its
wearer success, peace, and good luck. Peridot has been found in
Egyptian jewellery from the early second millennium BCE and was
mined from the volcanic island of Zebirget, or St. Johns Island, in
the Red Sea. Native Hawaiians referred to peridot crystals as the
tears of Pele, their goddess of fire
Peridot / Fosterite in
space
Fostrite (peridot)
crystal captured in space by NASA's Stardust spacecraft.
Image released by NASA on 20 February 2006 at the annual
meeting of the American Association for the Advancement
of Science.
External links
- Mineral Galleries -
Peridot
- Gemstone.org Peridot
- USGS peridot data
- Emporia Edu
- Florida State U. -
Peridot
References
Saudi Aramco World "Volcanic
Arabia" by Peter Harrigan. March/April 2006. Peridot mining in Saudi
Arabia.
Categories: Magnesium minerals |
Iron minerals | Silicate
minerals | Gemstones