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The 10,363-ct. Dom Pedro Aquamarine standing against the backdrop of the Smithsonian's Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., where it is now on display.



  World's largest cut aquamarine joins Smithsonian gemstone exhibition


December 14, 2012


A 10,363-ct. carved gemstone, billed as world's largest cut aquamarine, is vying with the famed Hope Diamond for attention at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. It is the latest addition to one of the most widely visited displays in what is called the most popular museum in the United States.

Called the Dom Pedro Aquamarine, the obelisk shaped aquamarine is more than 35 centimeters in height and weighs 2 kilograms. It was mined in Minas Gerais in Brazil in the late 1980s and is named after the country's two emperors, Dom Pedro Primeiro and Dom Pedro Segundo.

The Dom Pedro was cut in Idar-Oberstein, Germany, by one of the world's most renowned gem carvers, Bernd Munsteiner. As a rough gem it weighed 27 kilograms.

Munsteiner first saw the stone in April 1992, and he studied it for four months before starting work. The cutting and faceting was done by hand, and was completed in February 1993.

On the Dom Pedro, Munsteiner used a technique he helped develop in which a pattern of tapering "negative cuts" are faceted into the reverse faces of the obelisk, reflecting the lights so that appears to glow from within.

The Dom Pedro was first displayed in 1993 in Basel, Switzerland, but in Washington, D.C., it will be seen by a much a larger audience. It was donated to the Smithsonian by American gem collector Jane Mitchell and her husband, Jeffrey Bland. They purchased the aquamarine after hearing that it was going to be recut into multiple stones.

"We had no desire to hold on to it privately. We felt it should strike awe in as many people as could be," Mitchell told the Voice of America news service.

The Dom Pedro may be the largest carved aquamarine, but it is not the largest one ever mined. That title belongs to 552,500-ct. Papamel Aquamarine, which was discovered in 1910 at the Batadal mine, also in Minas Gerais.

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