Nevada Green Turquoise

Lorraine Yapps Cohen

Maybe it's the move toward "green." Maybe it's the calming character of the color. Maybe it's me, but I am simply mad about the special green turquoises from Nevada.

Turquoise has been found in abundance throughout the Southwest, but only the turquoise from deposits in Nevada can be called more green than they are blue. The greens range from a light lime to the dark colors of evergreen forests. Each of the deposits from which the turquoise is mined typically carry a characteristic green color. For example, Broken Arrow turquoise has a solid rich green color, whereas Carico Lake turquoise displays a spiderweb pattern in light and dark lime green.

Qualities vary from mine to mine as well. Green turquoise is found in seams in ground rock. Surrounding rock may be included with the green turquoise when cut, ground, and polished as gemstone. The non-turquoise rock is called matrix. Spiderweb patterns of turquoise and dark matrix create a valuable gemstone. Less valuable turquoise occurs when a light matrix predominates in the gemstone.

That the Nevada turquoises are green in no way devaluates the material as gemstones. Green turquoises are no more or less valuable than the traditionally colored turquoise. What affects value more than anything is whether the mine is still producing. Obviously, turquoise is more valuable from mines that are spent or have closed down.

Jewelers combine the various greens of special turquoises from Nevada for a richness in color and texture that few other gemstones can provide. A mélange of green turquoises in a jewelry design imparts a connection with "green" in all that the word implies.

Name Nevada as the place that gave us the gift of green in turquoise.


Published by Lorraine Yapps Cohen

I design jewelry free from the constraints of textbook techniques and write non-fiction free from the rigors of technical expression. Chemist by training, creative by spirit, conservative in values, and art...  View profile

12 Comments

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  • R.C. Johnson1/15/2012

    It appears that the image didn't make it along with the article (thanks for trying to provide that for us, Lorraine!) - we'll just have to do some imagining for ourselves of these beautiful green gemstones. rcj

  • Sandy Rothra1/14/2012

    Interesting. I've never seen green turquoise.

  • Martin Kloess1/9/2012

    well written - thank you

  • Mary Oberg1/9/2012

    I bet this green turquoise is gorgeous! I love my blue (and white) turquoise jewelry!

  • Lori Gunn1/9/2012

    Excellent article about green turquoise from Nevada. I read about green amethysts the other day. Green is a gorgeous color in clothing, jewelry and just about anything!

  • Lorraine Yapps Cohen1/9/2012

    It is regrettable that the picture of a necklace with a variety of green turquoises wasn't published along with the piece.

  • Karen LoBello1/9/2012

    I have seen some beautiful stones here in NV.

  • Mike Oberg1/9/2012

    Mary has some white turquoise jewelry made by the Native Americans near the Grand Canyon. They claimed it was available only to them.

  • J P Whickson1/9/2012

    I've seen the green turquoise. In fact as a child had a ring made of it..(Hint for others--don't wear a ring when swimming.) My grandmother bought it when she went on one of her journeys. She was basically senile but nobody wanted to admit it. She would take off and then call home for someone to pick her up since she had no idea where she was or how to get home. She started bank accounts in many of the towns where she landed and the family only found a few. However, she also purchased many locally made items included jewelry.

  • Gerald Kennedy1/9/2012

    Good article. I actually didn't know about green turquoise.

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