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Gemewizard® founder Menahem Sevdermish addressing the gemological conference about earth colored tourmaline from Tanzania.



  Tourmaline's variety and versatility spotlighted at gemological conference in Italy


June 11, 2012


The incredible variety of tourmaline, which provides jewelry designers a full array of color options in a single gemstone, was the subject of a gemological mini-conference, held for the third time in conjunction with the annual CIBJO Congress, which took place in Vicenza, Italy, in May.

The previous CIBJO gemological mini-conferences had features rubies and emeralds, leaving many to assume that the third edition would concentrate on sapphires. But the conference chair and organizer Margherita Superchi, a renowned Italian gemologist who is the immediate past president of the CIBJO Gemological Commission, surprised participants by selecting instead tourmaline, which is an aluminum boron silicate that is discovered in a range of color varieties, including some that are bi-colored and multi-colored.

Brian Charles Cook, a consulting exploration geologist who divides his time between Brazil and the United States, kicked off proceedings with a an entertaining review of tourmaline mining in North and South America. He spoke in detail about the various Brazilian mining sources for tourmaline, and in particular about the Paraiba locality that gave its name to the striking cuprian elbaite tourmalines that are mined there.

Menahem Sevdermish, president of European Gemological Center (EGC) of Israel and the founder of Gemewizard®, spoke about tourmaline from the Morogoro area of Tanzania, and using the color analysis and communication system provided a breakdown of what he described as the "earth color" tourmaline varieties found in the region.

Francine Payette, editor in chief of The Australian Gemmologist, presented an over view of "Tourmalines from Australia." It is a country with relatively few tourmaline localities, she reported, but produces attractive green and bluish gemstones. Payette noted that there are other potential tourmaline localities, but they are on tracts of land that are leased by mining companies extracting other, more lucrative minerals.

Federico Pezzotta, curator of Mineralogy at the Natural History Museum in Milan, spoke in detail about tourmalines from the Italian island of Elba, or elbaite, which is found in green, red to pink, blue, orange, yellow, colorless and multi-colored varieties. He said that in the vaults of Italian museums there are vast collections of Elba tourmaline that have never been seen by the public.

Two more technical, academic presentations were given by the renowned Karl Schmetzer, an independent researcher from Germany, who spoke about "Trapiche Tourmalines from Zambia," and Eugenio Scandale, deputy rector and professor of Mineralogy at the University of Bari in Italy, who describing tsilaisite, a newly identified tourmaline species.

Pornsawat Wathanakul, the academic advisor at the Gem and Jewelry Institute of Thailand and Chair of Mineral Sciences at Kasetsart University in Bangkok concluded the lectures with an overview of the nomenclature for the tourmaline family.

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