PVP estimado
0.75 CT AAA Quality Natural Tsavorite Garnet Gemstone
7691 views
5 mirando
Detalles
- SKU
- Dimensiones (mm)
- 6 x 5 x 3mm
- Peso (cts)
- 0.75
- Treatment
- No Treatment
- Colores
-
Descripción
0.75 CT AAA Quality Natural Tsavorite Garnet Gemstone (N)
Tsavorite is a trade name for the emerald-green variety of Grossular Garnet that originates in Africa. Tsavorite has become one of the most popular and expensive Garnets, due to its rarity combined with effective marketing tactics. This gemstone was first discovered in Tanzania in 1967. It was subsequently found in the same geological formation across the border in Kenya in 1970 near Tsavo National Park, a wildlife preserve in the African Serengeti, and given its name after the national park. Tsavorite was named by both Campbell Bridges, the discoverer of Tsavorite, and by Henry Platt, the president of Tiffany & Co. (one of the world's largest jewelry companies).
Tsavorite was discovered by Scottish geologist Campbell R. Bridges, a consultant for Tiffany & Co. Both deposits in Kenya and in Tanzania were discovered by Bridges, and this new gemstone was first named and marketed to the jewelry industry in 1974. (Bridges was tragically murdered by thugs in 2009 on his property near the African gem deposits.)
The color of Tsavorite can rival Emerald. Unlike Emerald, it often exhibits far fewer inclusions, and on occasion can be flawless. It is much rarer in nature then Emerald, and large Tsavorite gemstones command a high premium. The best Tsavorite color is a deep emerald green; lighter tones and yellowish hues are less desirable. The green coloring is caused by trace amounts of the elements chromium or vanadium in its chemical structure. Tsavorite is usually fluorescent a light cream-yellow color in ultraviolet light.
1909-14
Tsavorite is a trade name for the emerald-green variety of Grossular Garnet that originates in Africa. Tsavorite has become one of the most popular and expensive Garnets, due to its rarity combined with effective marketing tactics. This gemstone was first discovered in Tanzania in 1967. It was subsequently found in the same geological formation across the border in Kenya in 1970 near Tsavo National Park, a wildlife preserve in the African Serengeti, and given its name after the national park. Tsavorite was named by both Campbell Bridges, the discoverer of Tsavorite, and by Henry Platt, the president of Tiffany & Co. (one of the world's largest jewelry companies).
Tsavorite was discovered by Scottish geologist Campbell R. Bridges, a consultant for Tiffany & Co. Both deposits in Kenya and in Tanzania were discovered by Bridges, and this new gemstone was first named and marketed to the jewelry industry in 1974. (Bridges was tragically murdered by thugs in 2009 on his property near the African gem deposits.)
The color of Tsavorite can rival Emerald. Unlike Emerald, it often exhibits far fewer inclusions, and on occasion can be flawless. It is much rarer in nature then Emerald, and large Tsavorite gemstones command a high premium. The best Tsavorite color is a deep emerald green; lighter tones and yellowish hues are less desirable. The green coloring is caused by trace amounts of the elements chromium or vanadium in its chemical structure. Tsavorite is usually fluorescent a light cream-yellow color in ultraviolet light.
1909-14
Envío
| Proveedor de envío | Envío a Pakistán | Envíos al resto del mundo | Envío combinado ( Pakistán ) | Envío combinado (resto del mundo) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FedEx |
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| Registered Shipping |
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Detalles
- SKU
- Dimensiones (mm)
- 6 x 5 x 3 mm
- Peso (cts)
- 0.75
- Treatment
- No Treatment
- Colores
-
Descripción
0.75 CT AAA Quality Natural Tsavorite Garnet Gemstone (N)
Tsavorite is a trade name for the emerald-green variety of Grossular Garnet that originates in Africa. Tsavorite has become one of the most popular and expensive Garnets, due to its rarity combined with effective marketing tactics. This gemstone was first discovered in Tanzania in 1967. It was subsequently found in the same geological formation across the border in Kenya in 1970 near Tsavo National Park, a wildlife preserve in the African Serengeti, and given its name after the national park. Tsavorite was named by both Campbell Bridges, the discoverer of Tsavorite, and by Henry Platt, the president of Tiffany & Co. (one of the world's largest jewelry companies).
Tsavorite was discovered by Scottish geologist Campbell R. Bridges, a consultant for Tiffany & Co. Both deposits in Kenya and in Tanzania were discovered by Bridges, and this new gemstone was first named and marketed to the jewelry industry in 1974. (Bridges was tragically murdered by thugs in 2009 on his property near the African gem deposits.)
The color of Tsavorite can rival Emerald. Unlike Emerald, it often exhibits far fewer inclusions, and on occasion can be flawless. It is much rarer in nature then Emerald, and large Tsavorite gemstones command a high premium. The best Tsavorite color is a deep emerald green; lighter tones and yellowish hues are less desirable. The green coloring is caused by trace amounts of the elements chromium or vanadium in its chemical structure. Tsavorite is usually fluorescent a light cream-yellow color in ultraviolet light.
1909-14
Tsavorite is a trade name for the emerald-green variety of Grossular Garnet that originates in Africa. Tsavorite has become one of the most popular and expensive Garnets, due to its rarity combined with effective marketing tactics. This gemstone was first discovered in Tanzania in 1967. It was subsequently found in the same geological formation across the border in Kenya in 1970 near Tsavo National Park, a wildlife preserve in the African Serengeti, and given its name after the national park. Tsavorite was named by both Campbell Bridges, the discoverer of Tsavorite, and by Henry Platt, the president of Tiffany & Co. (one of the world's largest jewelry companies).
Tsavorite was discovered by Scottish geologist Campbell R. Bridges, a consultant for Tiffany & Co. Both deposits in Kenya and in Tanzania were discovered by Bridges, and this new gemstone was first named and marketed to the jewelry industry in 1974. (Bridges was tragically murdered by thugs in 2009 on his property near the African gem deposits.)
The color of Tsavorite can rival Emerald. Unlike Emerald, it often exhibits far fewer inclusions, and on occasion can be flawless. It is much rarer in nature then Emerald, and large Tsavorite gemstones command a high premium. The best Tsavorite color is a deep emerald green; lighter tones and yellowish hues are less desirable. The green coloring is caused by trace amounts of the elements chromium or vanadium in its chemical structure. Tsavorite is usually fluorescent a light cream-yellow color in ultraviolet light.
1909-14
Envío
| Proveedor de envío | Envío a Pakistán | Envíos al resto del mundo | Envío combinado ( Pakistán ) | Envío combinado (resto del mundo) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FedEx |
|
|
|
|
| Registered Shipping |
|
|
|
|
Almacenar
Nature’s finest creations, ready to be yours.
Kpk, Pakistán
Propiedad de msgemsminerals
Verificado
Comentarios recientes
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PositivoJust received this in the post. It is stunning. So happy with my purchase. Thank you for everything. Will definitely buy from you in the future.
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PositivoVery nice gem thank you
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PositivoI'm very pleased, the stone is much better than I thought. I'll be happy to continue shopping with you. I recommend it.
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PositivoSmooth and kind trade. Stones are as described and seller was helping with info and questions. Thank you
Auditoría
El programa Gemstone Sheriff permite a nuestros miembros solicitar una auditoría de cualquier producto, que es realizada por un Gemologist independiente que evalúa la precisión de la descripción del artículo y las imágenes.
Detalles de envío
Costos:
Tránsito:
10 días a través de FedEx
Se envía desde:
Pakistán
Opciones de pago
Descripción general
Tipo de listado :
Standard
ID del Producto :
999825
Empieza : 6th December 2025 02:29 pm PST
* Todos los precios están en USD