Spinel Gemstones - Sri LankaSpinel Gemstones - Sri Lanka

Spinel Value, Price, and Jewelry Information


Spinel is an important gem historically because it has been confused with other gemstones, especially ruby. Large red gems such as the Black Princes Ruby and the Timur Ruby in the Crown Jewels of England have proven to be fine large red spinels (ruby spinel). In ancient times this material was known as Balas ruby.

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Although spinel has been used in jewelry since ancient times, this gemstone has only recently received the attention it deserves. Before the rise of modern gemology in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, spinel was often identified as corundum, as they are often found in the same mines. Nevertheless, these minerals are chemically distinct. Subsequently, as jewelry enthusiasts were told some of their treasured rubies and sapphires were actually spinels, the stone’s reputation suffered. Furthermore, synthetic spinel is inexpensive and common. It has frequently been used as a simulant for other gems in class rings and birthstone jewelry, which has affected its public perception. Natural spinel, however, has always been a rare and beautiful gem. As more information comes to light about the extensive and invasive enhancements lower-grade ruby and sapphire receive to “pump up” their color or clarity, educated consumers have come to appreciate spinel’s natural beauty. The natural spinels in today’s market are almost all untreated. Their relatively modest prices, availability in nearly any color, and suitability for most types of jewelry make them even more inviting.

Spinel Gemstones - Sri Lanka
Spinel gemstones. Sri Lanka (8.35, 9.20, 9.30, 15.22 // 4.78, 11.23, 7.27, 5.46, 3.96 // 11.98, 8.53, 7.98, 14.96). Photo © Joel E. Arem, PhD, FGA. Used with permission.

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Spinel Value

Spinel gemstones - Myanmar
Spinel gemstones. Myanmar, (5.30, 2.98, 3.07 // 2.34, 10.98, 3.95 // 8.89, 2.68, 3.21. Photo © Joel E. Arem, PhD, FGA. Used with permission.

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Spinels range from strong, deep colors to very light pastels, coming in all shades of pink, lavender, red, red-orange, purple, blue, and even black. (Only pure green and yellow appear to be absent). These gems are found on every continent. The varieties are usually referred to by their color. The red and blue varieties are perhaps the most celebrated since they were historically identified as rubies and sapphires. (Spinels are also close to corundum in terms of luster and hardness).

Spinel is actually a large group of minerals. Gahnite, hercynite, ceylonite, picotite, and galaxite are all part of the spinel group. These materials are very dark and rarely used as gems. They're all isometric oxides of magnesium, iron, and zinc, with traces of aluminum and other elements. There is a solid-state solution between spinel (MgAl2O4) and gahnite (ZnAl2O4). The intermediate species is known as gahnospinel ([Mg, Zn]Al2O4). Unlike most solid-state series, like garnet, pure spinel is much more common than its blends.

Spinel Gahnite - Brazil
Spinel, Gahnite. Brazil (1.56). Photo © Joel E. Arem, PhD, FGA. Used with permission.

Spinels are allochromatic gemstones. This means that when the mineral is pure, it's colorless. Colors are derived only from the presence of trace elements acting as chromophores. Chromium, iron, and cobalt are the most common chromophores in spinel. The majority of jewelry gems, such as beryl (emerald, aquamarine, etc), corundum (ruby and sapphire), quartz, and topaz, are allochromatic. All have colorless varieties formed without the color-making impurities. In most of these cases, the colorless varieties are the most common and therefore the least valuable. Spinel is an exception. Until quite recently, no colorless specimens had been found in nature. Although colorless material could be synthesized by the bucketful in labs, apparently the conditions under which this gem forms in nature rarely exclude the coloring trace elements, making the colorless natural stone a rare and valuable collector's gem.

Star stone spinels with 4-rayed stars have occasionally been cut from gray or grayish blue to black stones from Myanmar. A 6-rayed star can be seen in such material if oriented along the 3-fold symmetry axis of the crystal (parallel to the edges of an octahedral face).

star spinel
Star spinel, a rare collector's gem. Photo courtesy of Barbara Smigel, Artistic Colored Stones.

Alexandrite-like spinels are known that are grayish blue when viewed in daylight and amethystine color in incandescent light. These are quite rare and usually small. Some stones from Sri Lanka change from violet (daylight) to reddish violet, due to the presence of Fe, Cr, and V.

Regardless of color, spinel's high refractive index ensures excellent brilliance in a well cut and polished stone. Its hardness of 8 makes it a good choice for almost all jewelry applications, including rings. However, a high "Tiffany-type" setting for an engagement ring or a signature ring for 24/7 wear is not advisable.

ImperialStateCrown - Spinel
The Black Prince's Ruby is the large, red cabochon at the front of the Imperial State Crown of the United Kingdom. Before the advent of gemology as a science, stones like this were called "balas rubies." In fact, the gem is a spinel. Other well-known historic gems long considered corundum, including the Timur Ruby, another crown jewel of the UK, have turned out to be spinels. "Imperial State Crown," Great Britain, Tower of London. Public Domain.

Spinel Varieties

Formula

R.I.

S.G.

Color

SpinelMgAl2O4

1.719

3.55-3.63

all but pure green and yellow

GahniteZnAl2O4

1.805

4.0-4.62

deep green

Gahnospinel(Mg, Zn)Al2O4

1.725 -1.753+

3.58-4.06

blue, dark blue

HercyniteFeAl2O4

1.835

4.40

black, dark colors

Ceylonite and pleonaste(Mg, Fe)Al2O4

1.77-1.78

3.63-3.90 (esp. 3.80)

very dark colors

PicotiteFe(Al, Cr)2O4

-

4.42

dark green to black

GalaxiteMnAl2O4

1.92

4.04

deep red to black

Refractive index variation with color, as generally observed in gems:

  • Red: 1.715 - 1.735
  • Blue: 1.715 - 1.747
  • Others: 1.712- 1.717 (normal)

Identifying Characteristics

Spectral

Very distinctive spectra, useful in identification.

  • Red and pink: chromium spectrum, has broad band at 540 nm, plus absorption of violet. Group of fine lines in the red may be fluorescent "organpipe" lines.
  • Blue: iron spectrum has lines in blue especially at 458, plus narrow line at 478 and weak lines at 443 and 433. Two strongest are at 686, 675, plus 635, 585, 555, and 508. (Note: This iron spectrum is distinctive vs. the cobalt blue of synthetic spinel.) Nigerian blue gahnite also has bands at 700 and 570 like those seen in spinel.
  • Mauve and pale blue: similar spectrum to blue, but weaker.

Inclusions

Spinels are generally free of inclusions, but some inclusions are distinctive. Silk, as in sapphires and ruby, is seldom seen in spinel. Angular inclusions known as spangles are seen. Rows and swirls of tiny octahedra of another spinel, such as magnetite (Fe3O4), are distinctive.

Natural Spinel with Octahedral Inclusion
Octahedron-shaped inclusions are the most common feature of spinels from all sources. In some cases they may actually be solid crystals of spinel. In other cases, they may be seen as fingerprints with tiny rows of octahedra-shaped negative crystals. In certain cases, these negative crystals may be filled with a foreign substance (such as white dolomite, yellow phlogopite, or black hercynite spinel). "Natural Spinel, Myanmar; Mogok/Namya." Photo by E. Billie Hughes. © Lotus Gemology. Used with permission.

Iron-stained films and feathers, especially at edges of gems, zircon inclusions and darkened surrounding areas, and zircon haloes (due to radioactivity) accompanied by feather around zircon due to stress cracking are also characteristic.

Natural spinels also contain octahedron-shaped cavities (negative crystals), sometimes filled with calcite.

Specimens from Mogok, Myanmar may contain inclusions of calcite, apatite, dolomite, and olivine.  Specimens from Sri Lanka may contain inclusions of zircon, sphene, baddeleyite, phlogopite, apatite, and spinel.

Blue Spinel with Zircon Inclusions
Like winged insects, zircon crystals with halos hover inside a blue spinel from Sri Lanka. Crossed polars. "Natural Spinel, Sri Lanka." Photo by Richard W. Hughes. © Lotus Gemology. Used with permission.

Synthetics

The flame fusion process invented by Auguste Verneuil in the late 19th century for making synthetic sapphire can also be used to synthesize spinel.

Colorless spinels are most likely synthetic. (Aside from the very rare colorless natural spinels, there are also very light, almost colorless natural specimens). These colorless synthetics make nice diamond simulants.

Remarkable natural blue stones containing cobalt may be difficult to distinguish from flux-grown or flame fusion synthetics. However, flame fusion synthetics often display chalky, whitish green fluorescence in SW UV and strong red in LW. These synthetics also display "crosshatched" or "snakelike" anomalous birefringent patterns in cross-polarized light. Natural cobaltian spinel also shows absorption bands at 434, 460, and 480 nm, which are not observed in synthetic material. The band at 460 is especially diagnostic.

Enhancements

Natural spinels typically are not enhanced but may receive heat treatment. Synthetic spinels may be quench crackled to simulate natural fractures.

Spinel Ring
"Spinel_Ring1" by derrico_jewelry is licensed under CC By-SA 2.0

Sources

Found traditionally and mainly in Afghanistan, Myanmar, and Sri Lanka, spinels have been discovered more recently in various sites in Africa, Australia, Russia, and Vietnam. These gems are usually not mined from the hard rock primary deposits in which they form but instead from alluvial or placer deposits where eroded material has been washed downstream. These "gem gravels" may contain other species in addition to spinel. The rough and tumble action has smoothed these crystals into rounded shapes and removed much of the included and fractured parts of the gem rough. This alluvial rough is easily recovered material that's great for faceting.

Mining methods range from low technology (one or more miners with straw baskets sluicing the stream gravel) to the use of backhoes and hydraulic hoses for removing overburden from long-buried stream beds and supplying water for gem separation by a small crew.

Alluvial spinel and ruby mine - Vietnam
Alluvial spinels and rubies, mined in Vietnam. Image courtesy of Gems from Earth.
  • Afghanistan: fine red spinel, source of many large gems of the ancient world.
  • Myanmar: from gem gravels, often found as perfect octahedra.
  • Sri Lanka: worn pebbles in wide variety of colors, especially pinks and blues; all the blue ones have a trace of Zn; many from Sri Lanka are black. The rare cobaltian variety is unique to Sri Lanka.
  • Jemaa, Nigeria: fine blue gahnite, SG = 4.40-4.59, RI = 1.793.
  • Madagascar: blue, gemmy gahnite.
  • Australia, Sweden, New Zealand: gahnite.
  • Russia: gemmy, fine pink material from Kuchi Lal in the Pamir Mountains.
  • Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam: from alluvial gravels
  • Japan: galaxite.
  • Canada; Finland; France; Germany; India; Italy; Pakistan.
  • United States: California; Colorado; Massachusetts; Montana; New Jersey; New York; Virginia.
spinel gems from around the world 4
The many colors of spinel: a suite of African spinels in purple, blue and pink, a top red Myanmar gem, an African lavender stone, a pink specimen from Russia, a "padparadscha" colored African piece, and an opaque black stone. Photo courtesy of Barbara Smigel, Artistic Colored Stones.

Stone Sizes

Spinels are known up to hundreds of carats in various colors.

  • Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC: 45.8 (pale purple, Sri Lanka); 36.1 (indigo blue, Myanmar) 34 (red, Myanmar); 29.7 (pink-violet, Sri Lanka).
  • British Museum of Natural History, London England: deformed red octahedron from Sri Lanka, 520; another crystal, 355.
  • Private Collection: 11.25 (Sri Lanka, superb cobaltian gem, intense blue emerald-cut).
  • Louvre, Paris, France: fine red gem, 105.
  • American Museum of Natural History, New York: 71.5 (red, Sri Lanka).
  • Crown Jewels of England: "Black Prince's Ruby," red spinel, estimated at 170; "Timur Ruby," red spinel, 361.
  • Diamond Fund, Moscow, Russia: fine red gem, over 400.
  • Banque Markazi, Teheran, Iran: red stone over 500, another over 200, one about 225.

Trade Names

In ancient times, red spinels were called "balas rubies," likely after Balascia, the ancient name of a region now divided between Afghanistan and Tajikistan. This was an important source of these gems.

Although spinels were identified as rubies and sapphires centuries ago, these are now recognized as distinct gemstones. Any references encountered nowadays to "spinel ruby" or "spinel sapphire" are erroneous. Red or green garnets are sometimes misleadingly called "Arizona spinels." Almandines are sometimes evocatively but wrongly called "candy spinels."

Consult our List of False or Misleading Gemstone Names for more examples.

Care

Spinels are hard and durable gemstones and require no special cleaning or care instructions. Consult our Gemstone Care Guide and Gemstone Jewelry Cleaning Guide for more information on various cleaning systems.

Earrings with Iolite, Garnet, and Spinel
"Sugarplum Earrings," sterling silver rings with white iolite drops topped by red-purple rhodolite garnet pears and multicolored spinels in shades of red, pink, peach and purple, by Marianne Madden is licensed under CC By-SA 2.0

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.


Donald Clark, CSM IMG

Donald Clark, CSM founded the International Gem Society in 1998. Donald started in the gem and jewelry industry in 1976. He received his formal gemology training from the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) and the American Society of Gemcutters (ASG). The letters “CSM” after his name stood for Certified Supreme Master Gemcutter, a designation of Wykoff’s ASG which has often been referred to as the doctorate of gem cutting. The American Society of Gemcutters only had 54 people reach this level. Along with dozens of articles for leading trade magazines, Donald authored the book Modern Faceting, the Easy Way.

Barbara Smigel, PhD. GG

Barbara Smigel is a GIA certified gemologist, facetor, jewelry designer, gem dealer, gemology instructor and creator of the well-regarded educational websites acstones.com and bwsmigel.info.

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