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GIA ensures accurate gemological measurements across its global laboratories through rigorous metrology practices, including systematic instrument calibration, validation from traceable standards, and ...
Using a multi-step process, Lucent Diamonds has developed a new treatment process for certain natural diamonds that creates colors from pink-purple through red to orangy brown.
The northeastern portion of the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil, contains the world's greatest concentration of complex granitic pegmatites, which are especially noted for the production of gem beryl, ...
Feature Gems & Gemology, Fall 2011, Volume 47, No. 3 Infrared Spectroscopy of Natural vs. Synthetic Amethyst: An Update Stefanos Karampelas, Emmanuel Fritsch, Triantafillia Zorba, and Konstantinos M.
View the holiday schedule for all GIA locations worldwide.
Blue diffusion-treated sapphires are becoming more prevalent than ever before. The diffusion technique, which involves the addition of color-causing chemicals during heat treatment, results in a thin ...
Conch "pearls" are calcareous concretions produced by the Queen conch mollusk, Strombus gigas, which is found in various areas of the Caribbean. Although conch"pearls" occur in a range of colors, the ...
Field Report Gems & Gemology, Fall 2013, Vol. 49, No. 3 Three Occurrences of Oregon Sunstone Duncan Pay, Robert Weldon, Shane McClure, and Kevin Schumacher ...
PDF versions of the GIA Laboratory-Grown Diamond Reports are available on Report Check. Look for an icon in the upper right hand corner. Once downloaded, the report can be printed for your records.
ABSTRACT Aquamarine and heliodor are colored by Fe ions, an important coloring agent for beryl. Blue to yellow gem beryl was studied by quantitative spectroscopy and trace-element analytical ...
Natural pearl identification is one of the critical problems in pearl research. The DNA study of pearly mollusks and oysters facilitates solving this problem. To fulfill this goal, GIA sent a group ...
Figure 1. A view of the pink sapphire mining pit at Kibuko, in the Uluguru Mountains of Tanzania. Photo by Vincent Pardieu/GIA. A team of GIA field gemologists visited Tanzanian mines in the summer of ...
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