- Birthstone for April -
The Synthetic Stone is CZ (Cubic Zirconia)
April's birthstone is the diamond.
Diamonds are a wonder of nature. Their cold sparkling fire has held us
spell-bound for centuries, inspiring rich passionate myths of romance,
intrigue, power, greed, and magic. Ancient Hindus, finding diamonds
washed out of the ground after thunderstorms, believed they were
created by bolts of lightning. In our place and time, the diamond is a
symbol of enduring love, and often grace engagement rings.
There are many kinds of diamonds:
transparent, translucent or opaque; ranging from colorless to sooty
black, with many colors in between. Mostly transparent diamonds,
colorless or tinted, are used as jewelry. Others are used widely in
industry. The color of a diamond depends on the kind of impurities
embedded inside it. Yellow diamonds, for example, betray minute
quantities of nitrogen, while boron imparts a bluish hue.
Diamonds are the rich cousins of
graphite, both crystalline forms of pure carbon. The enormous
differences in their properties is a result of the way that carbon
atoms are bonded together. In graphite, carbon atoms are arranged in
sheets that easily slide past each other, making them ideal as
lubricants and of course, pencil leads. Diamond crystals, on the other
hand, are a tight-fisted network of carbon atoms securely held in four
directions, making it the hardest naturally-occurring substance in the
world.
In order to achieve such a compact and
strongly-held network of carbon atoms, it is believed that diamonds
must have crystallized deep under the Earth's surface. At these depths
exist the proper conditions for the formation of diamonds; at 90 to
120 miles deep, pressures are more than 65,000 times that of the
atmosphere at the Earth's surface, with temperatures exceeding 2,700
degrees Fahrenheit.
Diamonds are found in alluvial deposits
- gravel swept by streams, rivers, glaciers and ocean currents. They
are also found in sedimentary rock where gravel deposits and organic
material have been compressed into rock. Diamonds can be found in some
samples of kimberlite - a type of volcanic rock first identified in
Kimberly, South Africa. Diamonds found in kimberlite are thought to be
very old, perhaps as much as three billion years old. Tiny flecks of
diamond have even been found inside meteorites - bits of rocky space
debris that land on Earth.
Diamonds are crystals, crystals
being the ultimate form of symmetry in nature. The shape of the
crystal reflects the internal orderly arrangement of atoms within it.
In diamonds, atoms of carbon are held tightly by covalent bonding,
where two neighboring atoms share an electron, endowing the diamond
crystal with great strength. But despite its hardness, diamonds can be
cut. This is accomplished by cutting the gem along planes parallel to
the faces of the crystal where the tight bonds between carbon atoms
are a little weaker. Found in their natural form, diamonds can appear
quite unimpressive. It is only when they are cut and polished by
skilled craftsmen, such that the light entering it is reflected and
refracted as best possible, only then is their hidden beauty revealed.
Some diamonds seem to have lived lives
of their own. One legendary stone of the diamond hall of fame
is the Koh-i-noor diamond. The Koh-i-noor's early
history is shrouded in time. It is believed to be 5,000 years old, and
was featured in the great Sanskrit epic "The Mahabharata".
Originally owned by the Rajah of Malwa in India, the Koh-i-noor has
since been a player in victories and defeats spanning India, Persia
and Afghanistan. It was in the possession of the great Mogul dynasty
from 1526 to 1739, its owners included Shah Jehan who built the Taj
Mahal in memory of his queen Mumtaz. The Persian invader Nadir Shah
briefly possessed it until his assassination in 1747. The jewel then
fell into the hands of Afghan rulers who eventually surrendered it to
the Rajah of Punjab, Ranjit Singh.
Two years after Ranjit Singh's death in 1839,
Punjab became part of India under British rule. The stone was
presented to Queen Victoria who had it cut from its original 187
carats to 108 carats in an attempt to further enhance its beauty.
After her death, the diamond became part of the British Regalia, and
was worn by Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother in her 1937 coronation.
In recent years, the Koh-i-noor diamond was worn as a brooch by the Queen Mother
on ceremonial occasions.
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