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1.60 Ct. Aquamarine from Mozambique
This loose stone is available to ship now
Item ID: | K4678 |
|---|---|
Dimensions (MM): help | Length: 8.14 Width: 6.4 Height: 4.63 |
Weight: | 1.60 Ct. |
Color: help | Blue |
Color intensity: help | Light |
Clarity: help | Very Slightly Included |
Shape: help | Emerald Cut |
Cut: | Emerald |
Cutting style: | Faceted |
Enhancements: help | Heat Treated |
Origin: help | Mozambique |
Per carat price: help | $450 |
This exquisite transparent blue aquamarine weighs 1.60 carats and has been carefully fashioned in an emerald cut, with precise dimensions of 8.14 x 6.40 x 4.63 mm. The stone presents a light color intensity that reads as a pure, icy sea blue under natural light, making it a refined choice for collectors and connoisseurs who appreciate a classical aquamarine palette. Clarity is graded as very slightly included, evaluated at eye level, which tells an experienced buyer that the gem retains strong transparency while exhibiting minor internal characteristics when closely inspected without magnification. The polish is excellent, a detail that ensures the step facets lie smooth and mirror like, improving surface brilliance and the overall tactile quality of the gem. This piece has been heat treated to refine its blue tone, a stable and widely accepted enhancement for aquamarine, and its documented origin is Mozambique, a source increasingly recognized for producing well colored and transparent beryl specimens. At The Natural Gemstone Company we present this aquamarine with full disclosure of its attributes, because transparency about grading, treatment, and origin is fundamental to informed purchasing.
The emerald cut is particularly well suited to aquamarine and is one reason this stone holds appeal for an educated buyer. The broad, parallel step facets of an emerald cut emphasize clarity and color uniformity, creating a tranquil, hall of mirrors effect rather than a scattering of flashes. For aquamarine, which often shows subtle tonal variations, the emerald cut permits a larger face up appearance for its carat weight, and the measured proportions here yield a pleasing table and overall balance. The depth of the stone, when compared to the average of its length and width, is approximately sixty four percent, a proportion that supports a confident face up spread while preserving depth to enhance body color. Excellent polish on those stepped facets means light glides across the surface cleanly, reducing surface disturbance and maximizing the gem's serene blue presence in a mounted piece. For buyers who value the interplay of cut and clarity, this aquamarine combines a classic cutting style with finish quality that complements its natural qualities.
Clarity in this gem is an asset in a nuanced sense, because the very slight inclusions it contains function as natural fingerprints, certifying identity and adding character rather than detracting significantly from beauty. Evaluated at eye level, the inclusions are minor, and they may present as delicate needle like growth tubes, tiny pinpoint mineral crystals, or faint linear zoning, features commonly encountered in natural aquamarine. These internal features are stable and embedded within the crystal structure, and their presence makes the stone uniquely identifiable, the way a fingerprint distinguishes one example from another. For an educated buyer and collector, these inclusions provide provenance clues and assist with future identification if the gem is ever submitted for recutting or remounting. They generally do not compromise structural integrity in aquamarine, which is a member of the beryl family known for good toughness, but they do contribute to the gem's story, demonstrating natural growth patterns and offering visual interest when viewed under the right light. Step faceting in an emerald cut also tends to render such inclusions less visually intrusive than in brilliant cut styles, because the planar facets channel the eye along broad planes of color and light.
Color, treatment, origin, and market value comprise the concluding considerations that an informed buyer will weigh. The light blue hue of this aquamarine aligns with classic stylistic preferences, conveying elegance and versatility for jewelry use, from rings to pendants. Heat treatment in aquamarine is an established practice used to remove greenish tones and enhance the pure blue, and this treatment is stable and permanent, requiring no ongoing maintenance or special handling beyond standard care for beryl. Mozambique as the reported origin is notable, because recent discoveries in that region have produced aquamarines that combine attractive tone with good transparency, and origin information can carry weight for collectors who track deposit histories and material flows. Taken together, the combination of a 1.60 carat weight, emerald cut that showcases transparency, very slightly included clarity that provides natural fingerprinting, excellent polish, documented heat treatment, and Mozambique provenance makes this specimen a compelling value proposition for buyers who demand both aesthetic refinement and verifiable attributes. At The Natural Gemstone Company we can assist with independent laboratory reports upon request, guidance on suitable mounting options to protect the stone, and high resolution imagery to help you evaluate the gem in hand. This aquamarine is well suited to a refined jewelry commission or to a serious collection, and we welcome inquiries for additional technical details, certification options, and secure purchase arrangements.






















