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Frequently
Asked Questions
Could
you give me more information on why you favor laboratory-grown
ruby crystal material over natural?
Often people who
have heard my reasoning on laboratory-grown crystals still
retain reservations about weather or not to get a stone acquired
by mining.
If I had the time
to show them examples of the convincing numerous and glass
fracture-filled rubies that sell for enormous prices (over
six thousand dollars for the better quality two carat stones),
they might quickly decide against the natural rubies. During my life,
I have spent several years in Asia. Over the last seven months,
four months have been spent in Asian countries where I visited
the same gem producing areas I have been going to over the
years. This gives me the opportunity to cut through all the
hype about gems and find out what really is coming out of
the field. I spend long periods with professionals who know
how to enhance gems artificially but do not declare this unless
they know they can not get away with it . Their attitude is
that they have kids to raise and the westerners are so wealthy
anyway, what does it really matter!!!!I know there is
a lot of lab-grown ruby floating around in Thailand because
of my conversations with the owners of the few ruby growing
labs in the world. They have told me how much they have sent
in the past year and, trust me, it does not show itself as
lab-grown when mixed in with the heavy trays of uncut rough
ruby. The fact is that if a ruby is heated to near melting
point, there will be no remaining inclusions to show evidence
of heat treatment, simply because they have been dissolved
into the gem. A gemologist has no information to prove is
has been super-fried. Most gemologists cannot detect heat
treatment in perfect stones with glass filling, due to the
cost of the equipment and time to really scrutinize the gem.
The gem dealer
will emphasize that the source he obtained it from is highly,
highly reputable. If that satisfies you, then let your karma
roll from there.
Should you be so
bold as to purchase a natural ruby I strongly recommend you
get it independently appraised for detection of heat treatment
at the Gemological Institute of America in Carlsbad, California.
Often when the mined sapphire is extracted, it can be a black
purple or pink color with a deep, blue vein that, when heated
to almost melting point or just over, will turn the stone
into a red or pink colored ruby! But you can imagine what
it's done to the new ruby's atomic crystal lattice. Often
gemologists may guess at a ruby's treatment, but again I ask
you to take it the Institute, or save you income and acquire
a much less expensive ruby that still grew using the laws
of mother nature.
| Myanmar's
Other Ruby
This is part of an article on heat treatment of ruby
taken from a scientific publication published by the
Gemological Institute of America.
Mogok is
not the only active ruby mining area in Burma. Stones
from the Mong Hsu (pronounced "Maing Shu") deposit,
located northeast of Taunggyi in myanmar's Shan State,
first began appearing in Bangkok in mid-1992. Since
then they have completely dominated the world's ruby
trade in sizes of less than 3 carats. While Myanmar
has taken steps to control the trade of Mong Hsu ruby,
much of it manages, nevertheless, to make its way
straight to the northern Thai border town of Mae Sai.
The Mae
Sai ruby market is located in Ruby Lane, where upwards
of 500 people engage in selling Mong Hsu ruby, mostly
rough with a few cut stones making an appearance.
Perhaps 50 kilograms of rough on a given day is displayed
in the market; no doubt much more is stored and viewed
under guard behind closed doors.
Before
heat treatment, the Mong Hsu ruby is certainly an
ugly duckling; most pieces look like sub-cabochon-grade
rhodolite garnet. This is mainly due to the crystal's
unusual blue cores. Heat treatment removes the blue,
as well as any silk, leaving the final product a rich,
clear red.
The Mong
Hsu ruby's biggest liability is the practice of glass
infilling in surface cavities and fractures. Kenneth
Scarratt, Lab Director at the Asian Institute for
geological Sciences, confirms that virtually every
stone over one carat that is sent for testing comes
back with the objectionable comments that evidence
of glass filling has been found. Some dealers lose
so much money due to glass filling that they stop
buying Mong Hsu ruby altogether.
It is common
practice to use borax (borosilicate) during burning.
Many Thai oven use fossil fuels, such as diesel, or
even charcoal. Such fuels create a reducing atmosphere
that adds, rather than subtracts, blue. Borax is said
to help neutralize the atmosphere created by fossil
fuels.
A simple
solution is to use an electric oven- addition of certain
gases can produce the desired atmosphere even with
the stones burned dry and without chemicals such as
borax added to the crucible. But electric oven are
more expensive and old habits die hard; thus the prevalence
of cheap oven and glass-filled rubies.
There are
a few treaters who burn dry, but if the quantity of
glass-filled rubies is any indication, they are the
exception. Thus traders are left to their own devices
- either trying to remove the glass by soaking the
gems in hydrofluoric acid (HF), or, when that fails,
trying to convince gemologists and jewelers that glass
infilling is an "acceptable trade practice."
Meanwhile,
consumer demand continues to fuel the trade in Mong
Hsu ruby. According to Bangkok dealer Mark Smith,
most Mong Hsu ruby weighs less than half a carat.
Stones in the 1-1.5 carat retch up to $1,500 per carat.
In Thailand's
Chanthaburi market, Mong Hsu rubies as large as five
carats are occasionally seen, and Smith himself has
purchased a couple of stones over three carats for
$2,500-$3000 per carat.
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| This
is from November/December 1996 Trade Journal Colored
Stone
As they
undergo enhancement, rubies are heated at temperatures
as high as 2000 degrees Celsius and packing silica,
aluminum, or borax. The first two substances have
been widely rejected, but borax, used as a cleansing
agent in glass manufacturing, has gained general market
acceptance, primarily because it enhances the clarity
of the stone by entering fissures and either masking
or partially mending them.

An example
of heated-treated ruby.
The dark violet color on the left
is the natural ruby.The light red
color on the right is the side that
has been heated.
The crux
of the problem lies in the amount of residue contained
in the stone. A lack of clear-cut classifications
in the enhancement process has resulted in increasing
dissatisfaction over the last two to three years among
Japanese buyers, who were unwilling to purchase heat-treated
gems that had undergone fracture filling. This dissatisfaction
has snowballed into a growing lack of consumer confidence
in Thai products in a market that commands 20 per
cent of Thai gem exports.
Discussion
of this matter at the most recent meeting between
a delegation from the Japan Jewelry Association (JJA)
and the Thai Gem and Jewelry Traders Association (TGJTA)
in March 1996 failed to produce any real progress
and instead left both sides adamantly defend their
positions. "[The Japanese] don't want borax used,
but we believe it helps the stone," said Thanan Maleesriprasert,
manager of the TGJTA. "exports to Japan have fallen,
but consumers must understand that all stones must
be treated or there are no good colors. The Japanese
are creating a problem because they want a stone that
they cannot find, and when they realize this they'll
come back to us," said Thanan at the meeting, championing
the opinions of heat-treatment facility owners in
Chanthaburi.
In contrast
to the Japanese market, the report will probably not
make a big difference to traders from the United States.
According to Banker, the U>S> market is generally
characterized by mass quantity and prices that the
consumer assumes reflect the type of treatments that
the stone has undergone.
The report
from AIGS is considered by many the most positive
step in the last three years to clarify market requirements.
But although agreement on classification of heat treatments
has been reached, the use of borax still pits the
dealers against the buyers. Chanthaburi heat-treatment
facilities owners, with vested interests in maintaining
strong business ties with Japan, claim that even if
borax were not used, they would have to use other
chemicals which would produce other residues., and
the issue would start again from square one.
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