Examples of cut emeralds from
Colombia
All pictured stones are from the Muzo emerald deposits
(Click on stones for larger images)



An article about The Emerald Deposits of Muzo, Colombia
By Joseph E. Pogue, Ph. D., Evanston, Illinois
Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers
Vol. LV, 1917 (Arizona Meeting, September, 1916)
http://www.palagems.com/emerald_colombia.htm
Inclusions (Images below)
(Quoted from http://www.gemstone.org/gem-by-gem/english/emerald.html)
Fingerprints of nature
The lively luminosity of its colour makes the emerald a unique
gemstone. However, really good quality is fairly rare, with inclusions
often marring the evenness of the colour – signs of the turbulent
genesis which has characterised this gemstone. Fine inclusions,
however, do not by any means diminish the high regard in which it is
held. On the contrary: even with inclusions, an emerald in a deep,
lively green still has a much higher value than an almost flawless
emerald whose colour is paler. Affectionately, and rather poetically,
the specialists call the numerous crystal inclusions, cracks or
fissures which are typical of this gemstone 'jardin'. They regard the
tender little green plants in the emerald garden as features of the
identity of a gem which has grown naturally.
So where do they come from and how is it that they exist at all? In
order to answer these questions, we need to look far, far back into the
time of the emerald's origin. Emeralds from Zimbabwe are among the
oldest gemstones anywhere in the world. They were already growing 2600
million years ago, whilst some specimens from Pakistan, for example,
are a mere 9 million years young. From a chemical-mineralogical point
of view, emeralds are beryllium-aluminium-silicates with a good
hardness of 7.5 to 8, and belong, like the light blue aquamarine, the
tender pink morganite, the golden heliodor and the pale green beryl, to
the large gemstone family of the beryls. Pure beryl is colourless. The
colours do not occur until traces of some other element are added. In
the case of the emerald, it is mainly traces of chromium and vanadium
which are responsible for the fascinating colour. Normally, these
elements are concentrated in quite different parts of the Earth's crust
to beryllium, so the emerald should, strictly speaking, perhaps not
exist at all. But during intensive tectonic processes such as
orogenesis, metamorphism, emergences and erosion of the land, these
contrasting elements found each other and crystallised out to make one
of our most beautiful gemstones. The tension involved in the geological
conditions conducive to the above processes produced some minor flaws,
and some major ones. A glance through the magnifying-glass or
microscope into the interior of an emerald tells us something about the
eventful genesis of this unique gem: here we see small or large
fissures; here the sparkle of a mini-crystal or a small bubble; here
shapes of all kinds. While the crystals were still growing, some of
these manifestations had the chance to 'heal', and thus the jagged
three-phase inclusions typical of Colombian emeralds were formed:
cavities filled with fluid, which often also contain a small bubble of
gas and some tiny crystals.
Logically enough, a genesis as turbulent as that of the emerald impedes
the undisturbed formation of large, flawless crystals. For this reason,
it is only seldom that a large emerald with good colour and good
transparency is found. That is why fine emeralds are so valuable. But
for the very reason that the emerald has such a stormy past, it is
surely entitled to show it - that is, as long as only a fine jardin is
to be seen, and not a rank garden which spoils both colour and
transparency.
All inclusion images (below) are from this Muzo Emerald

Click on small images of inclusions to enlarge.
