
Tsavorite
The shining green tsavorite is a young gemstone with a very long geological
history. Its home is the East-African bush land along the border between
In 1967, a British geologist by the name of Campbell R. Bridges was looking for
gemstones in the mountains in the northeast of
to one particular area, indeed
that they could extend over much greater areas - and in his opinion, the stratum
he had found was just such a one. For the rock belt in which most of
Campbell B. Bridges persevered. His surmise that the seam bearing the gemstones
might possibly continue into
to specialists up to that point
in time, but that changed quickly in 1974, when the Tiffany company began a
broad promotion campaign which soon made the tsavorite well known in the
Green like a garnet ...
So why is the stone called a tsavorite or tsavolite when it is actually a green
grossularite and comes from the colorful gemstone family of the
Garnet?
The nomenclature of gemstones follows certain rules. According to modern
mineralogical methods, gemstones are given a name which ends in 'ite'. In honor
of the Tsavo National Park, with its abundance of game, and the Tsavo River
which flows through it, the former president of Tiffany & Co. Henry Platt, who
had followed the developments of the gemstone from the very beginning, proposed
the name 'tsavorite'. Sometimes the term 'tsavolite' is used. However, both
names denote the same stone, the latter version simply having the Greek suffix
'-lite' (stone).
What is it that makes the tsavorite so desirable? Well, for one thing there is
its vivid, radiant green. The color range of the tsavorite includes a spring
like light green, an intense blue-green and a deep forest green - colors which
have a refreshing and invigorating effect on the senses. However, this gemstone
is also valuable on account of its great brilliance. It has, like all the other
garnets, a particularly high refractive index (1.734/44). Not without reason did
they use to say in the old legends that a garnet was a difficult thing to hide.
Its sparkling light was said to remain visible even through clothing.
Unlike many other gemstones, the tsavorite is neither burnt nor oiled. This
gemstone is not in need of any such treatment. Like all the other garnets, it is
simply a piece of pure,
unadulterated Nature. Another positive characteristic is
its robustness. It has almost the same hardness as the (considerably more
expensive) emerald, - approximately 7.5 on the Mohs scale - but it is markedly
less sensitive. That is an important feature not only when it comes to the
stone's being set but also in its being worn. A tsavorite is not so likely to
crack or splinter as a result of an incautious movement. It is well suited to
the popular 'invisible setting', in which the stones are set close by one
another, a technique which ought not to be used with the more sensitive emerald.
Thanks to its great brilliance, the tsavorite is, in this respect, a partner to
match the classics: diamond, ruby and sapphire.
Only in rare individual cases is a raw crystal of over 5 carats found, so a cut
tsavorite of more than two carats is a rare and precious thing. But then that is
one of the special features of this gemstone: that it can display its great
luminosity even in small sizes.
There's something very special about this young gemstone with the very long
history. With its fresh, vivid green, its good wearing qualities, great
brilliance and relatively reasonable prices, it is surely one of the most
convincing and honest gemstones that exist.