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PERIDOT , sometimes written peridote, a name applied by jewelers to " See also: noble See also: olivine," or that kind of olivine which can be used as a See also: gem-See also: stone (see OLIVINE)
.
The word peridot is an old
See also: trade-See also: term, of unknown origin, used by French jewelers and introduced into science by J
.
R
.
Hairy
.
Peridot is practically the same stone as See also: chrysolite (q.v.), though it is convenient to restrict that term to transparent olivine of pale yellowish See also: green colour, and to apply the term peridot to those kinds which are darker and decidedly green: the colour, which is due to the presence of ferrous iron, is never vivid, like that of See also: emerald, but is usually some shade of See also: olive-, pistachio- or See also: leek-green
.
Although the stone is sometimes cut en cabochon, and in See also: rose-See also: form, the cutting best adapted to display the co our is that of a table or a step-cut stone
.
Unfortunately the hardness of peridot is only about 6.5, or but little above that of See also: glass, so that the polished stone readily suffers abrasion by See also: wear
.
In polishing peridot the final touch is given on a copper See also: wheel moistened with sulphuric acid
.
Although olivine has a fairly wide distribution in nature, the varieties used as gem-stones are of very limited occurrence
.
Much my§iery for a long See also: time surrounded the locality which
yields most of the peridot of commerce but it is now identified with the See also: island of St See also: John, or Isle Zeboiget, in the Red
See also: Sea, where it occurs, as shown by M
.
J
.
Couyat, in an altered dunite, or olivine See also: rock (Bull See also: sac. See also: franc. See also: min., 1908)
.
This is probably the See also: Topaz Isle, rotrg'tos vijvos, of the ancients
.
It is generally held that the See also: mineral now called topaz was unknown to See also: ancient and mediaeval writers, and that their -roirii iov was our peridot
.
Such was probably the See also: Hebrew pitdah, translated' topaz in the Old Testament
.
Dr G
.
F
.
Kunz has suggested that the peridots of See also: modern trade are largely derived from old jewelry
.
The famous shrine of the Three See also: Kings in Cologne See also: Cathedral contains a large peridot, which has commonly been regarded as an emerald
.
It is notable that pebbles of transparent olivine, See also: fit for cutting, are found in the See also: United States in See also: Montana, Arizona and New Mexico; in consequence of their shape and curiously pitted See also: surface they are known as " See also: Job's tears." (F
.
W
.
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