Abstract

Myanmar is the principal provider country of high-quality jadeite jade in the world, including so-called primary and secondary stones. The secondary stones occur as rounded pebbles, boulders, and blocks in eluvium–alluvium and often hold varying degrees of weathering. Unlike common rocks, such as granite, gabbro, schist, gneiss, and amphibolite, secondary jadeite stones frequently have weathered cortexes that vary in appearance, depth, texture, and mineral components compared with those of inner primary bodies. In this study, representative samples of secondary eluvial–deluvial jadeite stones with varying weathered cortexes were selected, and their appearances, textures, mineral components, and chemical composition features were analyzed. Their weathered cortexes were red, yellow, white, or black, and were 0.01–1.80 cm thick. The cortexes were opaque, often with soil luster and a fansha phenomenon. The body of the jade was usually translucent, and green and white in color. Along the border between the weathered cortex and the body of a certain jade stone, the textures were the same for the successive grain sizes. The only difference was that there were more cracks, cleavage planes, and fissures in the cortex. Jadeite was the main mineral component of both; however, minor late-stage supergene minerals (such as gibbsite, kaolinite, and halloysite) and Fe-bearing colloidal minerals were identified along the grain boundaries in the cortex. Studies of the textures and mineral components of weathered cortexes have gemmological applications including the identification and grading raw jadeite, as well as its design and carving. Moreover, such studies might provide information for improving our understanding of the unique weathering processes of monomineralic aggregates relative to multiple-mineral rocks, as well as gambling jadeite jade pieces through analyzing their cortex.

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