August 31, 2010 4:47 PM

65-Carat Emerald Pulled from N.C. Farm

(AP)  An emerald so large it's being compared with the crown jewels of Russian empress Catherine the Great was pulled from a pit near corn rows at a North Carolina farm.

The nearly 65-carat emerald its finders are marketing by the name Carolina Emperor was pulled from a farm once so well known among treasure hunters that the owners charged $3 a day to shovel for small samples of the green stones. After the gem was cut and re-cut, the finished product was about one-fifth the weight of the original find, making it slightly larger than a U.S. quarter and about as heavy as a AA battery.

The emerald compares in size and quality to one surrounded by diamonds in a brooch once owned by Catherine the Great, who was empress in the 18th century, that Christie's auction house in New York sold in April for $1.65 million, said C.R. "Cap" Beesley, a New York gemologist who examined the stone.

While big, uncut crystals and even notable gem-quality emeralds have come from the community 50 miles northwest of Charlotte called Hiddenite, there has never been one so big it's worthy of an imperial treasury, Beesley said.

"It is the largest cut emerald ever to be found in North America," Beesley said in a telephone interview from Myanmar, an Asian country rich in precious gems.

The discovery is a rarity for emeralds found not in the rich veins of South America and Asia but in North America, said Robert Simon, owner of Windsor Jewelers in Winston-Salem.

"Most of the stones that have come out have not been gem-quality that I would mount in jewelry," said Simon, who was part owner of a 7.85-carat, dime-sized emerald found in the same community in 1998 that has since been set in jewelry and sold to a private owner.

Terry Ledford, 53, found the roughly 2-inch-square chunk rimmed with spots of iron a year ago on a 200-acre farm owned by business partner Renn Adams, 90, and his siblings. The rural community of Hiddenite is named for a paler stone that resembles emerald.

"It was so dark in color that holding it up to the sun you couldn't even get the light to come through it," a quality that ensured an intense green hue once the stone was cut with facets that allowed light into the gem's core, Ledford said.

The North Carolina stone was cut to imitate the royal emerald, Ledford said. A museum and some private collectors interested in buying the emerald have been in contact, Ledford said.

Modeling an empress's emerald is likely to have less influence on the North Carolina stone's sale price than its clarity, color and cut, said Douglas Hucker, CEO of the American Gem Trade Association, a Dallas, Texas-based trade association for dealers in colored gems.

"A 65-carat cut emerald from North Carolina is a big, big stone," he said. But "once an emerald is cut, it's subject to the same type of market conditions that any emerald would be."

Emeralds are part of North Carolina's mineral claim to fame, though other places in the U.S. also are rich in gems. Maine mines have yielded aquamarine and amethyst, Montana bears sapphires, Idaho is known for star garnets, and Arkansas has diamonds.

It's not fully known why small, subterranean cavities containing emeralds formed in central North Carolina, said geologist Michael Wise of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, who has studied the underground world around Hiddenite for years.

Emeralds are produced where a superheated fluid carrying the element beryllium migrated through rocks that contain chromium, Wise said.

"This doesn't happen frequently," Wise said. "The conditions have to be just right to make an emerald. ... It happens to be the case at this particular place."

Adams said decades ago when his parents owned the farm, they allowed anyone with a shovel to dig for emeralds on the property for $3 a day. Virtually all of it was too full of flaws to be cut into precious stones and was mostly sold to mineral collectors, Adams said.

Ledford said they don't plan to quit after pocketing the profits from their big find, Ledford said.

"We'll definitely keep on mining," he said. "It would be good to know you don't have to go and could do it for pleasure. You feel like you've got to find something to survive but since we found this emerald, once we get it sold, there will be less stress."

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 12 Comments
by legacyABQ2 September 2, 2010 9:18 AM EDT
Yeah it still looks ruined to me. Its not even fully polished! And the top surface is too wide!! Guess they dont know s&^t about cutting gems over in teabag land
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by legacyABQ2 September 2, 2010 9:15 AM EDT
Take a close look at that picture. Somebody has ruined that stone, or it was cut centuries ago, cause its rounded and uneven. Even handcutting can yield better results in the hands of an expert in India. What gives?
Stock photo?
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by ludvig1-2009 August 31, 2010 9:21 PM EDT
Wow, beautiful!
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by newsterI August 31, 2010 9:13 PM EDT
Of course instead of keeping it intact, they'll cut it into smaller pieces to make it into an artificially shaped stone, and the original, rare intact stone is lost forever.
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by rockcutr August 31, 2010 7:53 PM EDT
I am sort of surprised by the skeptics. Granted there always needs to be this in the gem trade. Synthetics may be grown in labs too easily and with those little flaws found in nature too. Then there is the history of miners not exactly being totally truthful. Just like fishermen and their tales of great catches.
Either way I really hope there is still honest folks out there seeking to do the right thing. This is an amazing find if true. I wonder of the investigative reporting aspect of this story. Is this a fish tale or the truth?
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by Turbidite August 31, 2010 5:05 PM EDT
Has anyone done a compositional analysis of the emerald to show that it isn't salted or synthetic?
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by gerryrigger August 31, 2010 4:06 PM EDT
Don't know much about jewelry, but somehow I don't think they did a good job cutting the thing (symmetry and definition)?
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by skeeterandbucky August 31, 2010 4:04 PM EDT
This sounds suspiciously like a story about a young man whose grandparents left him a farm in North Carolina and he discovered the largest Emerald mine on the North American continent. It was published in the New Yorker at least 5 years ago.
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by Myopinion046 August 31, 2010 3:09 PM EDT
65 Carats is the size not the worth CBS.
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by Myopinion046 August 31, 2010 3:31 PM EDT
Correction noted CBS.
by Myopinion046 September 1, 2010 3:28 PM EDT
You're a Johnny Come Lately that doesn't know what's he's talking about.
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