Cuprite Value, Price, and Jewelry Information
One of the rarest of all facetable gems, cut cuprites can show magnificent deep red color. However, these beautiful stones are too fragile for most jewelry uses.
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One of the rarest of all facetable gems, cut cuprites can show magnificent deep red color. However, these beautiful stones are too fragile for most jewelry uses.
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for full access to our price guide (updated monthly).Cuprite Value
Poorly cut cuprites will appear very dark and dull. Quality cutting will bring out their striking red colors and near-metallic luster, boosting their value.
What is Cuprite?
A type of copper oxide, cuprite has been mined as a copper ore and can also form as a patina on copper and bronze artifacts.
Does Cuprite Make a Good Jewelry Stone?
You're more likely to find cuprites in mineral collections than jewelry collections. With a hardness of just 3.5 to 4, they scratch easily. Thus, these gems aren't very suitable for use as ring stones. Pendants, earrings, and brooches are less risky options. Nevertheless, use protective settings for any cuprite jewelry pieces.
Cuprite crystals are typically too small and opaque for faceting. However, cuprite often occurs mixed with other copper-bearing minerals, such as malachite, chrysocolla, and azurite. Lapidaries can carve these mixed stones into cabochons.
Cuprite Varieties
Burnite is a mixture of azurite and cuprite.
Chalcotrichite is a dense, fibrous variety of cuprite.
Tile ore is a brick-red, massive variety.
Cuprite often pseudomorphs into malachite, which means its chemistry changes to malachite while retaining cuprite's external crystal form.
How to Identify Cuprites
In reflected light, cuprites may appear almost blueish. In transmitted light (when backlit), cuprites can show their deep red colors.
When backlit, these cuprites show their prized, deep red color. Cuprites and chrysocolla on calcite, 5.8 x 5.4 x 5.3 cm, Mashamba West Mine, Kolwezi District, Katanga Copper Crescent, Democratic Republic of the Congo. © Rob Lavinsky, www.iRocks.com. Used with permission.
Cuprite's very high refractive index (RI) of 2.848 and specific gravity (SG) of 6-6.14 will usually easily help distinguish cuprites from gemstones with similar color and appearance, especially more popular red gemstones like garnets, rubies, and spinels. However, other rare red gemstones of similar appearance — such as proustites, rutiles, and wulfenites — also have over-the-limit (OTL) RIs that overlap or approximate cuprite's. SG measurements should still distinguish these gems.
Cuprites have a brownish red streak. Please note that streak testing is destructive and should only be conducted as a last resort for identification and never on a finished gem.
As isometric crystals, cuprites have no birefringence or pleochroism, but some stones may show these properties anomalously. Polishing faceted cuprites with diamond paste may leave surface deformations that cause anomalous birefringence. One study has found that polishing with alkaline silica solutions instead can avoid this result.
Are There Synthetic Cuprites?
Scientists have synthesized cuprites for many purposes, including research into anti-fouling paints, the removal of patinas from bronze archeological finds, and other chemical and mineralogical processes. Crystals have also been synthesized, some have even been faceted. However, there doesn't appear to be widespread use of this lab-created material for jewelry.
Artisans have used cuprite to color glass beads since ancient times, and the practice continues into modern times, with synthetic material added to devitrified glass to simulate gemstones. Iimori Laboratory has produced "Maple Stones," brownish green devitrified glass pieces that resemble bloodstones with red "flowers" of synthetic cuprite.
Cuprites generally receive no treatments or enhancements.
Where are Cuprites Found?
As a mineral, cuprite occurs in many locations worldwide. However, to date, only one locality — Onganja, Namibia — has produced blood red crystals transparent and large enough to facet. (Most material from this mine is still opaque and often coated with a layer of malachite). Now closed and flooded, this mine probably won't produce any more cuprite. Since mineral collectors prize these fine crystals and don't want to see them cut, the availability of facetable material in the marketplace is very limited.
Other notable sources of crystals include the following locations:
- United States: Arizona; Colorado; Idaho; Michigan; Montana; Nevada; New Mexico; Pennsylvania; Utah.
- Australia; Bolivia; China; Chile; Cuba; Democratic Republic of the Congo; France; Hungary; Japan; Kazakhstan; Laos; Mexico; Russia; United Kingdom; Zambia.
Stone Sizes
Before the amazing Onganja discovery in 1973, the largest known cuprites weighed less than one carat. Onganja cuprites may reach sizes of 6″ across or more, and lapidaries have cut flawless stones up to 300 carats. Even larger finished stones may be possible.
- Smithsonian Institution (Washington, DC): 203.75 (octagon, Namibia); 172, 125.5, 110 (red, Namibia).
- Royal Ontario Museum (Toronto, Ontario, Canada): 66.34 (oval, Namibia).
- Devonian Group (Calgary, Alberta, Canada): 48.6 (red, Namibia).
- Private Collection: 299.5 (oval, Namibia).
The largest cuttable, completely transparent mass of cuprite resides in a private collection and weighs two kg.
Is Cuprite Safe to Wear?
Wearing or handling finished cuprites should pose no hazards. However, gem cutters should take precautions when working with this material. Due to its copper content, cuprite dust is toxic. Accidental ingestion could lead to acute distress, like vomiting, and chronic exposure could lead to liver and kidney damage. Lapidaries should wear protective masks and, ideally, use a glovebox to prevent inhaling or ingesting cuprite particles during cutting, polishing, and cleaning.
Caring for Cuprites
Over time, cuprites will lose their color from exposure to light. Store them away from light sources and reserve any jewelry for occasional evening wear.
Clean these gems only with water, mild detergent, and a soft brush. Consult our gemstone jewelry cleaning guide for more care recommendations.
Joel E. Arem, Ph.D., FGA
Dr. Joel E. Arem has more than 60 years of experience in the world of gems and minerals. After obtaining his Ph.D. in Mineralogy from Harvard University, he has published numerous books that are still among the most widely used references and guidebooks on crystals, gems and minerals in the world.
Co-founder and President of numerous organizations, Dr. Arem has enjoyed a lifelong career in mineralogy and gemology. He has been a Smithsonian scientist and Curator, a consultant to many well-known companies and institutions, and a prolific author and speaker. Although his main activities have been as a gem cutter and dealer, his focus has always been education. joelarem.com
International Gem Society
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