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Goldstone is a type of glass made with copper or copper salts in the
presence of a reducing flame. Under normal oxidative conditions, copper
ions meld into the silica to produce transparent bluish-green glass; when
the reduced goldstone melt cools, the copper remains in atomic isolation
and precipitates into small crystalline clusters. The finished product can
take a smooth polish and be carved into beads, figurines, or other
artifacts suitable for semiprecious stone, and in fact goldstone is often
mistaken or misrepresented as a natural material.
The most common form of goldstone gives the illusion of being
reddish-brown, although in fact that color comes from the copper crystals
and the glass itself is colorless. Some goldstone variants have an
intensely-colored glass matrix—usually blue or violet, more rarely
green—and a more silvery appearance to the suspended crystals, whose color
may be partially masked by the glass or which may be based on different
metals than copper (perhaps cobalt, manganese, or chromium).
The manufacturing process for goldstone was discovered in
seventeenth-century Venice by the Miotti family, which was granted an
exclusive license by the Doge. Persistent folklore attributes the
discovery and secret of goldstone to an unnamed Italian monastic order,
giving rise to the alternate name "monk's gold" or "monkstone". Another
name, "stellaria", is based on the starry internal reflections.
Curiously, goldstone is one of the few cases where a synthetic simulant
provided the eponym for the similar natural stone. The original Italian
name for goldstone is "avventurina" or some similar word or phrase
indicating its accidental discovery, hence the mineral name "aventurine"
for forms of feldspar or quartz with mica inclusions that give a similar
glittering appearance. Yet another name for goldstone is "aventurine
glass", but this should be discouraged to avoid confusion with the
minerals.
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