The traditional November birthstone, topaz is a popular gem. Although frequently associated with golden yellow as well as blue, it can be found in a variety of colors, including colorless. The rarest are natural pink, red, and fine golden orange, sometimes with a pink tone.
Topaz Value
Although clarity and size have a significant effect on the value of topaz, color has the greatest impact on pricing.
The highest values go to the rare pink and red stones, then orange and yellow. Intense, reddish orange topaz is?sometimes called “imperial topaz.” Yellow, orange, and brown stones are somewhat common. Colorless topazes are common and are low-value gems in any size.
Topaz, Russia, (17.84). Photo ? Joel E. Arem, PhD, FGA. Used with permission.
The term “precious topaz” refers to stones with a rich yellow to a medium, peachy orange color.
Oval-cut precious topaz, 11.30 cts, Brazil. Photo ? Joel E. Arem, PhD, FGA. Used with permission.
Blue has become the most popular color for topazes on the market today. However, almost all such gems began as colorless or pale blue topazes. A safe and very common heat-and-radiation treatment gives them striking, darker colors. Blue topazes are very inexpensive.
There is a rough correlation between color and density, as follows: pink: 3.50-3.53; yellow: 3.51-3.54; colorless: 3.56-3.57; blue: 3.56-3.57.?See "Identifying Characteristics" below.
Blue and colorless: weak yellow-green in LW, weaker in SW, greenish white to violet-blue in X-rays, and gems turn brown due to irradiation. Sherry brown and pink: orange-yellow in LW, weaker in SW, sometimes greenish white in SW. This material fluoresces brownish yellow to orange in X-rays.
Luminescence Present
Yes
Luminescence Type
Fluorescent, UV-Long, UV-Short, X-ray Colors
Enhancements
Pink or red, may be heat treated. Most blue topaz has been irradiated and heat treated. CVD treatment (surface coating) used to create mystic topaz.
Heat treated pink gems contain Cr and may show a Cr spectrum with a weak line at 6820. As in ruby, this line may reverse and become fluorescent. Otherwise, not diagnostic.
RI: 1.607-1.649; biaxial (+). See "Identifying Characteristics" below.
Optic Sign
Biaxial +
Etymology
From the Sanskrit tapas for fire, alluding to the orange color, or from Topazios, an ancient Greek name for St. John's Island in the Red Sea where the gem was said to be mined.
Occurrence
In pegmatites and high temperature quartz veins; also in cavities in granite and rhyolite; in contact zones; in alluvial deposits as pebbles.
Inclusions
Usually planes of two or more non-miscible liquids, each containing a gas bubble. Two and three-phase inclusions have also been noted.
Topazes: Russia (6.72), Brazil (12.59), Mexico (5.29), Brazil (4.65) // Brazil (25.25, 8.76, 7.20, 8.45), Russia (17.84). Photo ? Joel E. Arem, PhD, FGA. Used with permission.
Comments
Traditionally, all yellow, brown, and orange transparent gems were called topaz. With the advent of modern gemology, many of these stones were re-classified as different species.
While topaz has been synthesized in labs, it’s not usually commercially available.
Enhancements
In the 1960?s, a two-step method was discovered to turn colorless topaz blue. First, the rough is irradiated, turning it brown. Then, the brown stone is heated to achieve a stable, blue color. The process so nearly duplicates what happens in the Earth, a treated stone cannot be distinguished from a natural.
This pear-shaped topaz (18.88 cts, Russia) has an unusual, coffee-brown color. It’s possible this was a white topaz turned brown by irradiation. Photo ? Joel E. Arem, PhD, FGA. Used with permission.
Prior to this development, natural, light blue topaz was rare and valuable, while colorless topaz was common and could be purchased cheaply per ton. The aftermath: prices for blue topaz fell,?and these are now among the least expensive gems available.
Blue topaz, irradiated and heated, approximately 115 cts. Photo ? Joel E. Arem, PhD, FGA. Used with permission.
Topaz that has undergone this treatment and been turned dark blue is sometimes used as a simulant for aquamarine. These are distinct gem species. However, since topaz is typically less expensive than aquamarine, consumers should be wary of unscrupulous vendors who may try to sell treated topaz as aquamarine.
Heat treatments are also used to change some yellow, orange, and brown topaz to pink or red. This procedure is common, stable, and undetectable.
This untreated, naturally medium-blue topaz from Brazil contains inclusions of hematite platelets and fluid-filled cavities. Oval cut, 32.21 cts, 19 x 17.4 mm. ? The Gem Trader. Used with permission.
Mystic Topaz
A chemical vapor deposition treatment (CVD) is used to create mystic topaz, a stone with a multicolored coating on its surface. This is a common procedure. The surface coating can easily be scratched. This treatment can be detected by immersion.
Brazil is the principal source of gem-quality topaz. Minas Gerais produces fine yellow to orange crystals, facetable to large sizes, as well as colorless and pale yellow crystals up to several hundred pounds in size. These crystals are typically transparent. This locality also produces pale blue crystals and rolled pebbles, much of which is facetable.
Some orange crystals from Ouro Preto contain chromium (Cr). When heated (burned), they turn pink and show a Cr spectrum. Such material may be distinctly reddish even before heating.
Untreated, very pale blue to colorless topaz, 6.22 cts, 15.4 x 10.3 x 9.0 mm, Brazil. “Aquarian Eye” cut by Loren Brown. ? RSA Gems. Used with permission.
Russia
Russia is another major source of gem-quality topaz. The Ural Mountains region produces fine blue crystals, often cuttable, as well as gemmy material in green and magenta colors. Sanarka produces pink topazes.
Australia
Queensland and Tasmania yield blue, colorless and brownish gem crystals. Tingha, New South Wales produces green, gemmy material.
Mexico
San Luis Potosí produces?fine brownish to sherry-colored crystals, as well as colorless and some yellowish, in many excellent, cuttable forms. Some of this material can be darkened by irradiation, but the color fades in sunlight.
Topaz crystals may weigh hundreds of pounds and are often quite gemmy at this size. Gems up to 20,000 carats have been cut from material of various colors. Museums seem to delight in obtaining monster-sized topaz gems for display. Pink gems over 5 carats (Pakistan) are rare, however, and a Brazilian deep orange gem weighing more than 20 carats is considered large.
Topaz, Pakistan (36 cts, set in ring). Photo ? Joel E. Arem, PhD, FGA. Used with permission.
The largest known pink topaz is an oval of 79+ carats from Russia. The largest Brazilian topaz crystal ever found of an orange color reportedly measured 5 x 27 cm and weighed nearly 2 kg. A very fine lot (9 cuttable crystals) found in the 1960s weighed over 900 grams and yielded several superb gems, one weighing more than 100 carats and several over 50 carats.
Giant topazes exist in blue, colorless, and pale yellow colors. Red topaz from the tips of some Brazilian crystals is exceedingly rare, the largest about 70 carats.
On display at the Smithsonian Institution, this 12,555-ct topaz has over a thousand facets. It was mined in Minas Gerais, Brazil and cut in Idar-Oberstein, Germany. Photo by thisisbossi. Licensed under CC By-SA 2.0.
American Museum of Natural History (New York): 71 (red, Brazil); 308 (pale blue, Brazil); 258 (deep blue, Brazil); 1463 (deep blue, egg-shaped, Brazil); 241 (pale orange-brown, Myanmar).
Natural History Museum (London, UK): 137 pounds (crystal, Norway); 1,300 (colorless, Brazil); 614 (blue, Brazil).
Royal Ontario Museum (Toronto, Ontario, Canada): 3,000 (blue, Brazil); 365 (pale brown, Myanmar).
Los Angeles County Museum (Los Angeles): 1,800 grams (orange crystal, Brazil).
National Museums of Canada (Ottawa, Ontario): 498.61 (light blue, untreated, Brazil).
Private Collections: 173 (blue, Texas); 7,033 (dark blue, treated); 21,327 (light blue, treated, emerald-cut, reputedly the world‘s largest faceted gemstone called “The Brazilian Princess”); ~79 (pink oval, Russia, world’s largest this color but not flawless); 58.8 (pink oval. Russia, flawless).
Do these gold earrings from 19th-century Spain contain garnets, zircons, or topazes? Historically, the names “hyacinth” or “jacinth” described reddish brown stones. In modern times, these terms are used rarely but most frequently for reddish brown zircons. Nevertheless, you may still encounter these terms applied to topazes with this color. Gift of Marguerite McBey, 1980. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Public Domain. (Cropped).
Care
Due to topaz’s perfect cleavage, don’t use ultrasonic or steam systems to clean them. Both vibrations and heat could cause these gems to split. Instead, use a?soft brush, mild detergent, and warm water.
Some prongs can place stress on topaz’s?cleavage plane. However, an expert custom jewelry maker can set this stone properly to avoid stress. Protective settings can also minimize the strain on a topaz.
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