- High Grade Natural Turquoise: found in all shades from sky blue to
apple green. It is the hardest grade and takes the best polish. The contrast
between the color of turquoise and the color of matrix {or mother rock}
enhances the beauty of each stone. Many mines produce distinctive stones
whose origin can be identified by an experienced person.
- Enhanced turquoise: The Zachery or Foutz process impregnates turquoise
with vaporized quartz. This makes the stone harder, darkens the color and
takes a good polish. This process is hard to detect by normal methods because
quartz occurs naturally with some turquoise.
- Stabilized or Treated Turquoise: American manufacturers have perfected
a process using pressure and heat to fill the microscopic gaps in the stone
with plastic resin. When cured the product is a treated stone hard enough
to cut and polish. Most nugget and some heishi products are made from real
turquoise that has been stabilized. Stabilization allows genuine but lower
grade turquoise to be used in jewelry.
- Wax Treated: Much of the turquoise from China is wax impregnated. The
paraffin treatment deepens and stabilizes the color but only affects the
surface.
- Reconstituted: This term describes pulverized turquoise scrap from
stone cutting mixed with blue dye and plastic binder. Most products marketed
under this name should really by labeled as simulated block.
Compressed Nugget is a similar product made from larger pieces.
- Block: A mixture of plastic resin and dyes that is produced in loaf
sized blocks. We used to call this reconstituted because we were told it
was made from ground up turquoise scraps. In reality there is no actual
rock of any sort in block turquoise; it is entirely man-made and should
be labeled simulated. Block is produced in many colors, simulating
many different stones and shells. Except for occasional batches of Lapis
Block that contain ground up iron pyrite, these are entirely simulated.
Block is used heavily for inlay and heishi.
- Dyed Stones: There are several naturally occurring stones that look
similar to turquoise when they are dyed blue. These include Howlite, a white
rock with black or gray markings, and Magnite or Magnesite, a chalky white
mineral that forms in rough nodules looking faintly like the vegetable cauliflower.
Other simulations include glass, plastic, faience ceramic and polymer clay.
- This information on the treatments and grades was originally written
by Homer Milfred published by the New Mexico Abandoned Mine Land Bureau
in the Report 1994 1 November 15, 1995. We feel that this
is the most accurate and simplistic information on the grades of turquoise.
We would like to add that there are some lesser grades of natural turquoise
in smaller pieces that are used in small settings and inlay work. These
come in varying grades of hardness. The block turquoise referred
to here is really imitation or plastic and is quite often marketed as the
real thing. They can even create a matrix in it. Plastic turquoise or other
block stones can melt, fade and become quite less attractive after purchase
and wear. Imitation stones are quite often used in machine stamped silver
jewelry made overseas and marketed here as Native American jewelry.
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