Name:

Turquoise

Chem:

CuAl6(PO4)4(OH)8 * 5H2O
Hydrous copper aluminum phosphate

Crystal:

Triclinic (crystals are rare, usually compact or massive blocks)

Color:

sky blue, bluish-green, pale green

Refrac. Index:

1.61 - 1.65

Birefraction:

0.04

Hardness:

5 - 6

Spec. Grav.:

2.60 - 2.80

Fracture:

conchoidal

Cleavage:

none

Environment:

a secondary mineral in the alteration zone in hydrothermal replacement deposits

Association:

quartz, pyrite, chalcopyrite, apatite

Locals:

| Iran | Az., Nv., N.M., USA | Egypt | Afghanistan |

Misc:

The name comes from the French "turquoise", which means "Turkey" as in the original great localities in Persia (today Iran). Soluble in hot HCl

Gem info:

Turquoise has been used and coveted since before 4000 BC. It can be pure in color or may contain secondary minerals or even matrix. If the matrix forms a pattern of interlocking polygons it is sometimes called "spider-web" turquoise.

The associate minerals often make the original local easy to pin-point. The very best material still comes from Iran today. It has a one of the highest values of opaque gemstones and is second only to a few varieties of jade and the highest quality lapis.

It was used in much of the early American Indian jewelry and was often mixed with red-coral, pink-coral, or malachite. Today it is often found in intarsia with lapis, sugilite, and even opal.

A chalky variety is sometimes pressure treated with a plastic-polymer to make "stabilized" turquoise. It is worth far less than the non-stabilized material.

morenci

morenci2

blue-green

blue-green2

blue