The turquois is never found in crystals, but in reniform or stalactitic masses. The color varies from pea- and apple-green to greenish-blue, sky-blue and dark-blue. The hardness of the turquois is 6., specific gravity 2.6 to 2.8, lustre waxy, and condition opaque to slightly translucent. Before the reducing flame of the blow-pipe, the turquois does not melt, but becomes brown and colors the flame green. With borax and salts of phosphorus the turquois melts to a clear glass, while it is also soluble in hydrochloric acid. Oriental or mineral turquois is composed of:
The best color is a clear deep sky-blue, and in the true turquois this color improves by artificial light; imitation turquoises, however, lose their fine color under the same conditions. The finest gem turquoises come from the northeastern part of Persia, between Nishapoor and Meshed. Here they are mined and partly cut, and Occidental or bone turquoises called new rock or odontolites, to distinguish them from the Persian or old rock stones, are of organic origin. They are cut from the teeth of mammoths, mastodons, dinotheriums, etc., and are found near the town of Simor, in Lower Languedoc, France. These teeth, the enamel of which is nearly as hard as the mineral turquois, are colored by contact with phosphate of iron and copper, which gives them a dark-blue, light-blue, and bluish-green color. They are easily attacked by a file, and totally destroyed by aqua-fortis. When heated, the fossil turquois or odontolite gives an offensive odor, owing to the decomposition of animal matter. The odontolite is lighter than the mineral turquois, changes color by artificial light, loses color in distilled water and alcohol, and is translucent on the edges. This fossil turquois does not fade like the mineral turquois, but by artificial light appears of a dirty grayish-blue. Turquoises are sometimes artificially stained, but this can be detected by applying a drop of ammonia to the back of the stone, and if the color is artificial the ammonia will eat it off, leaving a green spot. Ammonia does not affect the color of the Persian turquois. The so-called |