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City officials said that 55,000 visitors flocked to Tucson this year to attend the gem shows.



  Tucson Gem Shows end on generally upbeat note, traffic slightly up from 2011


February 14, 2012


As it does each year, for two weeks the western U.S. town of Tucson became the focal point of the world colored gemstone trade, as dealers, jewelry manufacturers, geologists, hobbyists and rock and gemstone aficionados flocked in for the upward of 40 trade fairs that make up the Tucson Gem Show fortnight. This year it ran from January 28 to February 12.

And while it is difficult to obtain accurate data about visitor numbers and sales results, given the number of shows and the loosely structured nature of the event, anecdotal evidence suggested that the mood was upbeat despite the ongoing economic downturn, and traffic was somewhat better than it had been in 2011.

Quoted by JCK, Doug Hucker, CEO of the American Gem Trade Association, which organized the AGTA GemFair from January 31 to February 5 at the Tucson Convention Center, said that traffic was "even or slightly up" from 2011. "There is a general feeling that things have turned around. You are seeing a lot of the better jewelers here ready to get back in the colored store business," Hucker said.

One of the hallmark events of the two-week period was the Tucson Gem & Mineral Show, which was held this year for the 58th time. Embracing the theme "Minerals of Arizona," it honored the centennial celebrations taking place in the State of Arizona, and featured displays from museums and private collections.

Not everybody went home happy. According to media reports almost $1 million worth of gemstones were stolen from a trailer hitched to a pickup truck parked outside a vendor's motel room. The goods belonged to three Oregon sunstone dealers who were exhibiting at the GJX exhibition. It was the latest in a series of costly thefts reported during the Tucson gem and mineral shows over the past 10 years.

The two-week gem festival is not only a major trade event but it is an important period on Tucson's calendar. According to the Metropolitan Tucson Convention and Visitors Bureau, this year 55,000 people from all over the world came to the gem shows, injecting anywhere between $70 million and $100 million into the local economy.

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