{{Infobox mineral
| name = Tanzanite
| category = Mineral Variety
| boxwidth =
| boxbgcolor =
| image = Tanzanite cut.jpg
| caption = Tanzanite gemstone, featuring an oval mixed cut
| formula = (Ca
2Al
3(SiO
4)(Si
2O
7)O(OH)
| color = Purple to Blue
| habit = Crystals flattened in an acicular manner, may be fibrously curved
| system =
Orthorhombic
| twinning =
| cleavage = Perfect {010} imperfect {100}
| fracture = Uneven to conchoidal
| mohs = 6.5
| luster = Vitreous, pearly on cleavage surfaces
| refractive = 1.69-1.70
| opticalprop = biaxial positive
| birefringence = 0.006-0.018
| pleochroism = Present,
dichroism or
trichroism depending on color.
| streak = White or colorless
| gravity = 3.10-3.38
| Density =
| fusibility =
| diagnostic =
| solubility =
| diaphaneity =
| other =
}}
'Tanzanite' is the blue/purple variety of the
mineral zoisite discovered in the Meralani Hills of northern
Tanzania in 1967, near the city of
Arusha. It is a popular and valuable
gemstone when cut, although its durability is somewhat lacking; its tendency to break sometimes precludes appropriate use as a ring stone. Tanzanite is noted for its remarkably strong
trichroism, appearing alternately sapphire blue, violet, and sage-green depending on
crystal orientation. However most tanzanite is subjected to artificial heat treatment to improve its colour, and this significantly subdues its trichroism.
Background
Manuel de Souza, a
Goan tailor and part-time gold prospector living in Arusha (Tanzania), found transparent fragments of vivid blue and blue-purple gem crystals on a ridge near Mererani, some 40 km southeast of Arusha. He decided that the mineral was olivine (peridot) but quickly realized that it was not, so he took to calling it "dumortierite", a blue non-gem mineral. Shortly thereafter, de Souza showed the stones to John Saul, a
Nairobi-based consulting geologist and gemstone wholesaler who was then mining aquamarine in the region around
Mount Kenya. Saul, with a Ph.D. from M.I.T., who later discovered the famous ruby deposits in the Tsavo area of Kenya, eliminated dumortierite and cordierite as possible I.D.s and sent samples to his father, Hyman Saul, vice president at
Saks Fifth Avenue in New York. Hyman Saul brought the samples across the street to the Gemological Institute of America who correctly identified the new gem as a variety of the mineral zoisite. Correct identification was also made by mineralogists at Harvard, the British Museum and Heidelberg University, but the very first person to get the identification right was Ian McCloud, a Tanzanian government geologist based in Dodoma.
Hyman Saul got two of the samples facetted and showed them to Henry Platt of
Tiffany and Company, who immediately appreciated the beauty of the gem and subsequently coined the name "tanzanite", an obvious allusion to its country of origin. These two stones were subsequently mounted in rings.
The allusion to the country was thought necessary in order to make the stone
marketable to the public: the name has since stuck as a varietal designation. Tanzanite's present-day popularity as a gemstone is largely thanks to Tiffany's marketing campaigns. The mining of tanzanite nets the
Tanzanian government approximately
USD $20 million annually, the finished gems later being sold mostly on the US market for sales totaling approximately USD $500 million annually.
In October of 2002 the
AGTA.org made the first change in more than 90 years to the "modern birthstone chart" and crowned Tanzanite as the December birthstone. Most organizations do not recognize tanzanite as a December birthstone, however, and the AGTA's move to make it a December birthstone has generally been viewed as a marketing ploy.

Natural tanzanite cut and set into a bracelet.
In June of 2003, the Tanzanian government introduced
legislation banning the
export of unprocessed tanzanite to
India (like many gemstones, most tanzanite is cut in
Jaipur). The ban has been rationalized as an attempt to spur development of local processing facilities, thereby boosting the
economy and recouping
profits. This ban was phased in over the next two years, until which time only stones over 0.5
grams were affected.
This is a serious situation for the city of Jaipur, as one-third of its annual gem exports are of tanzanite. Some members of the industry fear the ban will set a precedent, leading Tanzania to ban the export of ''all'' raw gem material, including the country's production of
tsavorite,
diamond and
ruby.
In April 2005, a company called TanzaniteOne Ltd. publicly announced that they had taken control of the portion of the tanzanite deposit known as "C-Block" (the main deposit is divided into 5 blocks). Over the next year, this company established a
De Beers-like control over the tanzanite market, restricting distribution to a handful of processors referred to as "SightHolders"
[1]. The company is also increasing its control of all newly mined tanzanite by purchasing a large portion of the production coming from the operations of the independent miners working in the area. This is the first time that a colored gemstone has been controlled in this way. Prices for rough on the open market have increased steadily for the last several years as the company has solidified its control of the market. In August 2005, the largest tanzanite crystal was found in the C-Block mine. The crystal weighs 16,839
carats (3.4 kg) and measures 22 cm by 8 cm by 7 cm.

A rough sample of tanzanite.
Prices
The prices of Tanzanite have historically been volatile but TanzaniteOne's SightHolder system is keeping prices firm. Retail prices for top quality Tanzanites were just $225 per carat in the year 2000
, to $500 in early 2007
[1].
How Is Tanzanite Graded
There is as yet no universally accepted method of grading for Tanzanite.
TanzaniteOne has intoduced plans to remedy "price distortion." The company, formerly called Afgem, has established the nonprofit Tanzanite Foundation, which has developed a quality-grading system that justifies a wider range of prices.
COLOR. The new system's color-grading scales divide tanzanite colors into two different hues, blue violet and violet blue.
Each has 10 saturation levels
- 6 :
1 - Vivid Exceptional.
2 - Vivid 1.
3 - Vivid 2.
4 - Intense 1.
5 - Intense 2.
6 - Fancy 1.
7 - Fancy 2.
8 - Light 1.
9 - Light 2.
10 - Pale.
This grading system is not as yet accepted throughout the trade. The world's most prestigious laboratory, the GIA, still uses a different system.
[2] The world's most recognised laboratories have yet to reach consensus on terms used for grading Tanzanite although the top gradings on most systems will be similar.
Simulants
A lab-created simulant of tanzanite is called ''tanzanique''. It closely mimics the color of natural tanzanite however it does not display the same
pleochroism. Tanzanite is the mineral
zoisite, while tanzanique is
fosterite. A periwinkle blue/lavender colored
cubic zirconia has also recently come into general use as a tanzanite simulant.
See also
★
mineral list
★
jewelry
External Links
★ http://tv.oneworld.net/article/view/150104/ A documentary about child miners of Tanzanite on
OneWorldTV
References
1. TanzaniteOne Corporate Overview
★ http://www.tanzaniteauthority.com/index.html
★ http://www.tanzanite-gemstone.com/history.htm
★ http://www.gemstone.org/gem-by-gem/english/tanzanite.html
★ http://mineral.galleries.com/minerals/gemstone/tanzanit/tanzanit.htm
★ http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1594137-1,00.html Time Article about the rise in popularity of tanzanite
★ http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,900582,00.html Article in the early stages of tanzanite (1969)
★ http://www.swalagemtraders.com/articles/tanzanite.html Interesting documents from the early days.