:''For other uses of the word carat, see
Carat.''
The 'carat' is a unit of
mass used for measuring
gems and
pearls, and is exactly 200
milligrams.
[1] The word came to English from French, derived from the
Greek ''kerátion'' (κεράτιον), “fruit of the
carob”,
[2] via
Arabic ''qīrāṭ'' (قيراط) and
Italian ''carato''. Carob seeds were used as weights on precision scales because of their reputation for having a uniform weight. However, a
2006 study
[3] found carob seeds to have as much variation in their weights as do other seeds, though it seems that it is easier than with other seeds to recognize particularly large or small specimens and remove them.
[“Did carob seeds allow shady diamond deals?”, ''New Scientist'', page 20, 6 May 2006.] Thus, the carob seed was used as a weight not because it was
naturally more uniform in weight, but because it could be more easily standardized.
In past centuries, different countries each had their own carat unit, all roughly equivalent to the mass of a carob seed. In the
United Kingdom, before
1888, the 'Board of Trade carat' was exactly
grains;
[4] after
1887, the
Board of Trade carat was exactly
grains.
[5] Despite it being a non-metric unit, a number of metric countries used this unit for its limited range of application. In
1907, the definition of the 'metric carat' of 200 milligrams was adopted at the Fourth
General Conference on Weights and Measures; this replaced the non-metric carat definition in the
United States on
July 1,
1913, and superseded the Board of Trade carat in the United Kingdom on
1 April 1914. The metric carat is the one that is universally used today.
The carat is divisible into one hundred ''points'' of two milligrams each. The Board of Trade carat was divisible into four ''diamond grains'',
[6] but measurements were typically made in multiples of
carat.
There were also two varieties of ''refiners’ carats'' once used in the United Kingdom — the 'pound carat' and the 'ounce carat'.
[7] The
pound troy was divisible into 24 ''pound carats'' of 240 grains troy each; the pound carat was divisible into four ''pound grains'' of 60 grains troy each; and the pound grain was divisible into four ''pound quarters'' of 15 grains troy each. Similarly, the
ounce troy was divisible into 24 ''ounce carats'' of 20 grains troy each; the ounce carat was divisible into four ''ounce grains'' of 5 grains troy each; and the ounce grain was divisible into four ''ounce quarters'' of 1¼ grains troy each.
[8]
For
diamonds, a ''paragon'' is a flawless stone of at least 100 carats (20
g).
The
ANSI X.12 EDI standard abbreviation for the carat is 'CD'.
External links
★
A chart showing the size of various round diamond carat weights.
★
A PDF chart showing the size of various fancy shaped diamond carat weights.
Notes and references