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Guide To Turquoise

So what amount of cash would we say we are talking with regards to really top notch turquoise? "In contrast to gold or precious stones, no two pieces that are going into very good quality jewelry are actually something similar — period!" Otteson says. "Turquoise of this quality is novel and very uncommon. For each 100 pounds (45 kilograms) of turquoise mined, around 25 pounds (11 kilograms), or 25%, are viewed as jewelry quality, and of the 25 pounds, something like 1 pound (0.4 kilograms) is viewed as high-grade or pearl quality. It's normal for this grade of turquoise to sell between $40-$200 per carat. In an immediate correlation, gold sells at $1,425 per ounce and there are 16 ounces in a pound, so that compares to 1 pound (0.4 kilograms) of gold selling available for $22,800. For a similar pound (around 1,200-1,500 carats) of pearl grade turquoise, on the low end, it would sell for $50 per carat x 1,200 carats for an aggregate of $60,000 per pound — approximately multiple times the cost of gold. On the very good quality ($200 per carat) ... very much we should simply say it's significantly higher ... you figure it out!"

The Spiritual Significance of Turquoise

"Turquoise is a hallowed stone to a large number of the Native American clans of the American Southwest," the Tanners compose. "The one of a kind allure of turquoise comes from its shading family relationship to the sky and similarity to water, which is the most valuable thing in the Southwest." See wholesale turquoise cabochons.

"Essentially every Native American clan has utilized turquoise, regardless of whether for recuperating or stylish purposes," Garland says. "Maybe because of its memory of sky and water — two consecrated components here in the Southwest — this uncommon blue-green gemstone conveys otherworldly importance for a considerable lot of the clans around here. The Southwest has various local clans (Arizona alone has 21 governmentally perceived clans). Every clan has their own special conviction framework and viewpoint on the meaning of turquoise."