View previous topic :: View next topic |
Author |
Message |
Tobi
Site Admin

Joined: 07 Apr 2009
Posts: 4235
Location: Germany



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 02:20 Post subject: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
Hi all,
some time ago a fellow collector told me that the famous pink grossulars from Sierra de Cruces in Mexico ( https://www.mindat.org/loc-5433.html ) are treated to get this great colour and that they were actually pale, with a colour like human skin. After a discussion on German Mineralienatlas board most others said they never heard of that and that the exceptional colour of these garnets is completely natural, caused by manganese. Does anyone here have more information about this?
Thanks in advance!
Tobi
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
keldjarn
Joined: 18 Feb 2008
Posts: 157



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 03:25 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
Tobi,
the "rasberry" colored grossular garnets I have from Mexico show colour zonation as would be expected from different composition of the fluids during growth. Also garnets totally enclosed in calcite have the same strong rasberry colour. I think these observations exclude the possibilities of any artificial origin of the colour. Variable Mn-contents in the different layers is a plausible explanation.
Knut
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Jordi Fabre
Overall coordinator of the Forum

Joined: 07 Aug 2006
Posts: 5021
Location: Barcelona



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 04:31 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
I totally agree with Knut. In fact I never heard nothing about anthropogenic improvement of the color of these garnets, so it could be a very local history due to the intense color of the garnets, or maybe some of these garnet were covered by Paraloid or similar (please see: Repairing mineral specimens) to avoid them to fall down of its matrix and that cover improves a little bit its color...
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Riccardo Modanesi
Joined: 07 Nov 2011
Posts: 630
Location: Milano


|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 04:57 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
Hi to everybody!
An interesting article on the magazine "GEMMOLOGIE" from the German Gemological Association in Idar-Oberstein came out recently about these pink and green grossulars from Mexico. Some of them have a pink coloured covering and a green core inside. I have also a raw specimen of pink grossularia from Mexico, typical rhombododecahedral crystals on rock, the biggest one is some 4 mm diameter.
Greetings from Italy by Riccardo.
_________________ Hi! I'm a collector of minerals since 1973 and a gemmologist. On Summer I always visit mines and quarries all over Europe looking for minerals! Ok, there is time to tell you much much more! Greetings from Italy by Riccardo. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Tobi
Site Admin

Joined: 07 Apr 2009
Posts: 4235
Location: Germany



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 06:25 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
Thanks! I'm expecting such a specimen and if i keep it as new addition to my collection, i would not want to have something manipulated. I knew about the zoning: All of those garnets seem to have a dark core under the pink surface. I only wanted to ask if something was done to make that colour better. It is good to be careful when something seems "too" nice. And garnets with a colour like Sweet Home Mine rhodos are not really something you expect. So much the better if it was nature and not men who made those wonderful crystals :)
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
GneissWare

Joined: 07 Mar 2008
Posts: 1287
Location: California



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 07:27 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
The old big pink garnets, once called Roselite, were collected in the late 1950s to early 1960s by George Burnham of Burminco (Monrovia, CA). Based on his contemporaneous field notes, they were pink when found. As for the other garnets (red and raspberry), I have collected both in situ and they are that color in the ground.
I have not tested the big pink ones for luster enhancement, and have been suspicious of that aspect only.
-Bob
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
lluis
Joined: 17 Nov 2006
Posts: 719


|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 08:37 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
Dear All
Well, I have never read nothing about color enhancing of garnets (and God knows that I am interested in colour enhancement treatments because I have worked when a little kid for a gems' dealer and I like a lot cut stones; yes, my sin.... :-( ; to hear that many yellow corundum are treated, well, makes me not very happy.....)
Other, as Jordi and GneissWare pointed, is if someone covered them with colour enhanced Paraloid or the equivalent, to enhance luster and color.
But if we come to that, maybe we should place a look in some chinese rhodos with astronomical prices..... :-(
Anyway, some time ago (7-10 years....; infinite patience....) I have heard direct from a rock hound about amethyst colored Jeffrey Mine garnets. Not the pink ones, but lilac.
Some found, sold, never more heard, never more seen....
With best wishes
Lluís (any lilac Jeffrey garnet for a collector.... :-) ? It would have a good home! )
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Elise

Joined: 22 Dec 2009
Posts: 243
Location: New York State



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 08:41 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
Hi,
Just to add a bit more -- on another thread about these garnets, I posted a portrait Jeff Scovil took in 2011 of my small collection of them https://www.mineral-forum.com/message-board/viewtopic.php?p=15771&highlight=#15771 It shows the deep color and the core (I had started the thread to inquire about the color and fluorescence).
Cheers!
Elise
_________________ Elise Skalwold |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Jean Sendero

Joined: 20 Dec 2009
Posts: 270
Location: Hudson Heights, Quebec



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 08:57 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
Interesting, concept but so unlikely.
Dennis Beals that mined the area a few years back showed me photographs of the garnets, pink or red depending on where they were from in the "vein" that were in-situ, still in place in the bedrock.
Also Virgil Lueth presented a paper at the New Mexico Mineral Symposium of 2002. You can find the abstract following this link on page 133. ( https://geoinfo.nmt.edu/publications/periodicals/nmg/downloads/24/n4/minsymp.pdf / link normalized by FMF). The title of the paper was "Red Garnets from Lake Jaco, Mexico, and the chemical controls of color in Garnets".
Happy reading and I hope that the skeptics will now be believers.
Cheers
Jean
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
GneissWare

Joined: 07 Mar 2008
Posts: 1287
Location: California



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 08:57 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
These are definitely from the later find -- Graham Sutton and I found the deposit in 1993; Dennis is currently mining them. They are natural and unenhanced.
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Peter Megaw
Site Admin

Joined: 13 Jan 2007
Posts: 973
Location: Tucson, Arizona



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 10:12 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
The color of these garnets, and similar manganese-rich garrnets from Morelos State, Mexico is natural. It is quite likely that some specimens have benefited from "luster in a can", especially the mass processed commercial level material.
It bears repeating that George Burnham (Burminco), in adddition to bringing out a lot of good specimens, is responsible for the mis-naming or misattribution of these garnets as "Lake Jaco" Chihuahua...it was his dodge to eliminate competition. The garnets come from the Sierra Las Cruces, which is in Coahuila State, east of Lake Jaco in the Sierra Mojada Muncipality. Lake Jaco should be eliminated from your labels.
There is an excellent article on the locality by Virgil Lueth in Mineralogical Record's third Mexico issue...volume 34 #6.
Description: |
Anglesite and plattnerite ps Galena spinel twin Buena Tierra Mine, West Camp, Santa Eulalia, Chihuahua, Mexico small cabinet Nothing to do with garnet, but a fun piece. Peter Megaw specimen and photograph |
|
Viewed: |
16167 Time(s) |

|
_________________ Siempre Adelante! |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Dennis Beals
Joined: 06 Jan 2011
Posts: 13
Location: Denver


|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 10:33 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
Hi Tobi,
I have been mining this location for the last few years. The color is quite natural. It varies quite a bit and the very best color came from the Cerro de Moki which is only a short distance from where I dig. That location was mined out. If you are interested in seeing more about it, my facebook page has an album about the location including in situ fotos and no I don't own a copy of photoshop!
Dennis
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Tobi
Site Admin

Joined: 07 Apr 2009
Posts: 4235
Location: Germany



|
Posted: Aug 16, 2012 10:55 Post subject: Re: "Raspberry" grossular from Mexico - colour treated? |
|
|
Thank you all!
And Dennis, i browsed your Mining in Mexico album: Very nice photos, the garnets you found are really fine. And natural ;)
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
|