|

 A
small stone object, identified by the catalog number HM601, is part of the
permanent collection of the Hudson Museum. It was bequeathed to The University
of Maine in 1982 by alumnus William P. Palmer III, along with more than
2000 other objects, the majority from Mesoamerica. An index card that came
with the artifact and is maintained in the object file states:
Emerald
figure of a man. To the best of my knowledge the only Emerald carved
in the round piece in existence [ sic ] of Pre-Columbian
origin. Area unknown. 500 BC to AD 200.
It
is unclear who wrote the original record which also indicates the
piece is Olmec, was purchased or delivered on March 30, 1968 and
was originally numbered 284M. Palmer bought objects numbered in
this way from a New York City art dealer. The object file also contains
a copy of a flyer indicating that this object and seven others were
stolen from Palmer sometime between October 16 and 18, 1968. It
is not known when or how the pieces were recovered and returned
to him.
The
stone figure (pictured on the right) is emerald green in color with
many small areas of blackish-green and yellow mottling. The lapidary
who created it used straight cuts to carve it into the shape of
a standing man. The man's hands are folded over his mid-section
and he wears a short apron and headgear. Drilled holes pass through
the figure under the arm pits and from side to side through the
head. The figure is 5.63 cm high, 2.85 cm wide and 1.37 cm thick.
Its weight is 23.7 g or 118.5 carats.
Is
it a natural emerald?
Beryls are aluminum beryllium silicate, or Al 2 Be 3 (Si 6 O 18
), and come in various colors The ones that are distinctive emerald
green in color are considered most valuable. “Emerald” is derived
from a Persian word which appeared in Greek as smaragdos ,
meaning “green stone.” Replacement of beryllium by alkali oxides
and aluminum by chromic or ferric oxides in emeralds is common.
The distinctive green color of emeralds is caused by trace amounts
of chromium or vanadium. The following tests were performed by certified
gemologist James Vose to determine if HM601 is a natural emerald:
Test
1: Visual and microscopic (50x) examination . The overall
appearance and color are consistent with a natural emerald, rather
than an epoxy fake. Genuine emeralds are often clouded by inclusions
(known as “jardin” ) and show an irregular distribution of color.
Test 2: Determination of refractive index (R.I.) .
This is the most valuable gem-testing procedure to perform. The
R.I. is the ratio of the velocity of light in air to its velocity
in a given substance. The “spot method” was used to determine the
approximate R.I. because of the figure's rounded surfaces. To produce
an optical contact between the figure and the glass hemisphere of
the refractometer instrument, a minute dot of methylene iodide with
tetraiodoethyl added was used on the surface of the figure. The
figure's R.I. is within the 1.577-1.583 range of natural emerald.
Test
3: Chelsea filter test . The Chelsea or emerald filter
is used to distinguish emerald from other green stones and imitations.
The filter absorbs most of the visible light spectrum but transmits
the long red wavelengths and a band in the yellow-green portion
of the spectrum. Emerald transmits red light and absorbs some yellow-green
light, so it appears red when illuminated by bright incandescent
light and viewed through the filter. Most other green stones and
glass imitations appear green. However, a few other green stones
and synthetic emeralds appear red, while emeralds from some localities
appear green when viewed through the filter. A high-intensity fiber
optic cold light source was used to examine numerous areas of the
figure. A definite reddish area appears at the edge of the right
shoulder, consistent with natural emerald from Colombia or Russia.
Test
4: Determination of specific gravity (G) . G is the weight
of a substance compared to the weight of an equal volume of pure
water, expressed in terms of g/cm 3 . The hydrostatic method is
the best way of obtaining accurate results on large specimens. Using
a diamond balance, the figure was weighed in air, then in water.
Specific gravity was calculated according to the formula:
G= wt. of figure in air/(wt. of figure in air-wt. of figure
in water) .
Final determination of G was 2.887. This is an exceptional result
for an emerald, since the normal range is 2.670-2.780, but it is
within the 2.800-2.910 range of alkali beryls. No emeralds reported
in the literature have such a high value of G. However, alkali beryls
do not have the green color of emeralds.
Test
5: Absorption spectroscopy . Attempts to obtain a spectrum
by using a hand spectroscope on light from a fiber optic source
passed through and reflected off the surface of the figure failed.
Test
6: Observation under ultraviolet (UV) light . Luminescence
is emission of light without application of strong heating. Under
long-wave UV light, emerald specimens from most localities show
very weak florescence or none at all, but some show a strong red.
Emeralds from Chivor, Colombia display a very weak red glow. Synthetic
emeralds fluoresce dark or strong, dull red. Under long-wave UV
light, the figure showed purplish-red in the waist area and below
on the front and from the shoulders to the legs on the back. Under
shortwave UV light, 98% of the surface was purplish-red, with a
brighter red area on the back of the head.
What
is the source of the raw material?
Emeralds
come from only a few localities around the world. Most emeralds
occur in metamorphic rocks as a by-product of that environment but
Colombian deposits are unique because they are based on hydrothermal
processes. Physical characteristics of emeralds, including color,
transparency, inclusions, trace elements, specific gravity, refractive
index, appearance through the Chelsea filter and florescence under
UV light vary depending on locality. Click here
for map of geographic origins of emeralds from around the world.
During
the Conquest, Pizarro and Cortes sent emeralds from Peru and Mexico,
respectively, to the Spanish court. Cortes obtained his emeralds
from the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan. The only source of the stone
in the Western Hemisphere known at the time of the Conquest was
Colombia. Emeralds reached as far south as Bolivia and as far north
as Mexico by trade. It is known that the Colombian sources were
being mined by the Chibcha earlier than AD 1000, but how much earlier
is unknown.
Test
7: Spectral analysis by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) .
The emerald was placed in a vacuum in an ElectroScan environmental
SEM made by Noran Instrumets, Inc. to run energy dispersive X-ray
tests on three locations. Tiina Hallamaa, a visiting scientist from
the Finnish Pulp and Paper Institute, ran the equipment under the
supervision of Pierre Lapoutre, professor of Chemical Engineering,
in a Paper Surface Science Program laboratory at The University
of Maine. The SEM column in Table
1 includes elements from Figure
1 and Figure
2 but not Figure
3 , because of possible contamination.
Test
8: Trace element analysis by X-ray fluorescence (XRF) .
The trace elements in a sample can be of aid in evaluating gem stones.
Using a New England Nuclear Cd-109 source of silver X-rays (25KeV)
and a Canberra intrinsic germanium X-ray detector with a Canberra
amplifier and a high voltage supply, and an Oxford-Nucleus PCA Board
in 486-66 personal computer, Charles T. Hess and N. Nation of the
Department of Physics and Astronomy at The University of Maine collected
data for 708 seconds elapsed time, 2259 seconds real time. Calibration
was done using an X-ray fluorescence sample of copper and the silver
source X-rays. The resulting spectrum is shown as Figure
4 . The “XRF” column in Table
1 includes elements from Figure 4.
To
read more about the Emerald Man, visit the news briefs at Archaeology
magazine.
Is
it Olmec?
The
figure's general appearance is similar to some small Olmec stone
figures but it lacks certain defining characteristics which would
make identification certain. For example, it does not possess the
cleft forehead and down-turned mouth typical of many Olmec carvings
(see below). The holes drilled under the armpits are common features
of many Mesoamerican stone and ceramic figurines.

Stone
Were-Jaguar Baby pendant combining feline and human traits. Has
typical V-shaped forehead indentation and baby face whose features
include a mouth with down-turned corners in a snarl or cry, prominent
upper lip, toothless gums and flat nose.
Test
9: Microscopic examination . James Vose and Stephen Whittington
examined the figure under the magnification of a light microscope.
The drilled holes are wider near the surface than in the interior.
Marks above the cut defining the top of the left hand and on the
left thigh adjacent to the gap between the legs indicate that the
cutting tool slipped during the cutting process. Both characteristics
suggest that hand tools, rather than power tools, were used. The
fact that the errors were not polished away means that magnification
was not being used.
Where
was it dug up?
A
call was made to the art dealer who sold the figure to Palmer to
ask if he had any information about the history of the figure before
Palmer bought it, especially the site from which the object was
dug, presumably by pot-hunters. The dealer was not forthcoming with
information.
Conclusions
Is
it a natural emerald? The material appears to be
natural emerald, despite its exceptional specific gravity. G is
directly related to the amount of alkali oxides in the stone and
X-ray fluorescence indicates the presence of a large amount of strontium
and smaller amounts of rubidium and barium. All of these elements
form oxides with molecular weights much higher than that of beryllium
oxide, which they replace in the structure of the emerald. This
could account for the value of G. The red glow under long-wave UV
light could signal that this is a synthetic emerald, if not for
the large number of trace elements, which are unlikely to appear
in synthetics.
What
is the source of the raw material? If emerald-bearing
shales are considered, the best match for the figure is the Muzo
source in Colombia. However, X-ray fluorescence uncovered strontium
and bromine in the emerald, which do not match any published source.
Therefore, the source may still be undiscovered. One tantalizing
possibility is a rumored source in the jungles of eastern Ecuador.
Is
it Olmec? Uncorrected errors made by the lapidary
and conical drill holes suggest a Precolumbian origin, but lack
of definite Olmec characteristics preclude assigning it to that
culture.
Where
was it dug up? This information appears to be unobtainable,
unless soil remaining within cuts can someday be chemically matched
with soil at a particular site.
|