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The Carolina Emperor, weighing 64.82 carats, showpiece of the Nature Research Center in the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh.



  50.5-carat emerald discovered by gem enthusiasts at mine in North Carolina


April 13, 2012


A pair of gem enthusiasts from Hiddenite, North Carolina, have found themselves in the fortunate position of deciding what to with a 50.5-carat emerald, which they discovered while exploring the nearby North American Emerald Mine.

Kevin and Libby Barrieault had joined members of the Mountain Area Gem and Mineral Association Club (MAGMA), for a trip to mine. It was the first time in 40 years that the mine's owners had allowed non-commercial miners to explore and work on the property.

According to Libby Barrieault, they hit pay-dirt pretty quickly. They were at the site for not much more than five minutes before making their discovery, she told WCNC, a television station in Charlotte.

In the opinion of Jamie Hill, the owner of North American Emerald Mine, the Barrieault's emerald could bring them about $10,000. But Libby is not sure whether it is for sale. "I don't think I'll sell it, but we're not sure yet" said told WCNC. "I might just put a wire around it and wear it like it is. It's beautiful."

The Barrieaults were not the only gem enthusiasts to get lucky. A day later, a couple from Florida discovered a 30-carat emerald, and then a rock embedded with several emeralds, estimated to weigh 370 carats in total.

The community of Hiddenite is well known to gem enthusiasts around the United States. The area around it is a host to 63 different types of naturally occurring gems and minerals, including emerald, aquamarine, sapphire, garnet, topaz, amethyst, citrine, rutile and tourmaline.

The town also is the original source of hiddenite. A green, chromium-rich, transparent variety of spodumene, the gemstone was named after William Earl Hidden, who played a key role in identifying the gemstone. The town of Hiddenite is reportedly named after the stone and not the individual.

North Carolina is a the most prominent known source for emeralds in the United States. Just last month, three uncut emeralds, with one weighing 1,225 carats, and the largest cut emerald in North America were given to the state Museum of Natural Sciences by an anonymous donor. The gems will be exhibited in the new $56 million Nature Research Center in the state capital of Raleigh.

The two other uncut emeralds weigh 685.5 carats and 591.5 carats, respectively. The cut stone, known as the Carolina Emperor, weighs 64.82 carats and is styled after one once owned by Russian ruler Catherine the Great.

Chris Tacker, the museum's curator of geology, estimates the emeralds were in the ground for 250 million years to 300 million years before being discovered.

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