Colombian Emerald Mines — Sub-Distinctions
Mine-level diagnostics for Muzo (parisite + halite), Chivor (pyrite dominant), Coscuez, La Pita, and trapiche emerald; cross-reference to colombia.yaml.
Introduction
This file provides mine-level sub-distinctions for Colombian emerald beyond the
origin-level overview in colombia.yaml. All Colombian deposits share the
"black shale" or sedimentary-hosted hydrothermal model: Cretaceous black shales
(Villeta Formation) host emerald-forming brines without associated igneous rocks.
All three major mines share the diagnostic Colombian three-phase inclusion (liquid +
gas + halite cube) — the halite being unique to Colombian emerald worldwide. The
mine-level distinctions below allow laboratory sub-classification.
Colombian Deposit Type — The Black Shale Model
All Colombian mines share these features:
- Host rock: Hydrothermal veins in Cretaceous black shales/phyllites; no
nearby igneous rocks — purely sediment-hosted - Brine: NaCl-saturated hydrothermal fluid at ~300°C in a thrust-belt setting
- Three-phase inclusions: Liquid + gas + halite (NaCl) cube — the halite is
the critical discriminator from ALL other emerald origins worldwide; no other
major source traps NaCl cubes in three-phase inclusions [1] - Chromophore: Cr³⁺ ± V³⁺; ratio varies by mine; affects colour tone
- Li content: <200 ppmw — shared with Afghan and Pakistani emerald [1][2]
Muzo Mine
The most famous Colombian mine:
Location and Geology
- Boyacá Department, ~165 km north of Bogotá
- Primary mine of the "Western Zone" of Colombian emerald production
- Same black shale hydrothermal system as Coscuez/La Pita
Chromophore Profile
- Higher Cr relative to V — "warmer" green, typically a pure vivid
medium green; often the most valued pure green Colombian colour
Diagnostic Inclusions
- Three-phase inclusions: Liquid + gas + halite (NaCl) cube — as all
Colombian - Parisite: Calcium rare-earth fluorocarbonate; yellow-orange hexagonal
crystals; highly diagnostic for Muzo specifically — absent in Chivor - Albite: White platy crystals
- Calcite rhombs
- Pyrite: Present but less abundant than Chivor
- Jagged, irregular growth tubes
- Vasquez and Zellagui (2019) noted the pyrite and chromite inclusion assemblage
differentiates Colombian mine sources
Chivor Mine
The "Eastern Zone" mine with distinct character:
Location and History
- Boyacá Department, ~100 km northeast of Bogotá
- Known to pre-Columbian Muisca people; rediscovered 1904 by Reinaldo Uribe
- Schmetzer, Martayan, and Ortiz (2020) published the comprehensive history [3]
Chromophore Profile
- Generally higher V relative to Cr than Muzo — cooler, often bluish-green
to teal at lower saturations; sometimes described as more "electric" blue-green
Diagnostic Inclusions
- Three-phase inclusions: Liquid + gas + halite (same diagnostic as all Colombian)
- Pyrite: Cubic metallic inclusions — far more abundant and larger at Chivor
than at Muzo; THIS IS THE MOST RELIABLE VISUAL MINE-LEVEL DISTINCTION - Albite crystals (white platy)
- Calcite and dolomite
- Often cleaner overall (fewer total inclusions per stone)
- NO PARISITE: Parisite is Muzo-specific; its absence helps exclude Muzo
The Chivor vs Muzo Visual Rule
Coscuez Mine
The third major traditional mine:
- Location: Boyacá Department, near Muzo; same geological zone
- Shares the Muzo-type inclusion suite: three-phase + parisite + albite; same
black shale host and hydrothermal system - Much commercial Colombian emerald from the 1970s–1990s originated from Coscuez
without separate attribution from Muzo; the two are often grouped as "Western Zone" - Trapiche emerald was first associated with Coscuez and the adjacent Peñas
Blancas area
Newer Mines — La Pita, La Pava, Cunas
Post-1990s mining in Boyacá Department:
- La Pita (Coscuez extension area), La Pava (Muzo-Quípama area),
Cunas (Muzo area) - These mines produce commercially but share the Muzo-zone inclusion suite
(three-phase + parisite ± calcite) - Sub-geographic discrimination between Muzo, Coscuez, La Pita, and Cunas is
beyond current routine laboratory capability - Most labs report "Colombian" or "Western Zone" (Muzo-type) vs "Eastern Zone"
(Chivor-type); finer mine-level attribution is not routinely certified
Trapiche Emerald
A uniquely Colombian growth phenomenon:
What Is Trapiche?
- Trapiche emerald is NOT a variety of emerald but a growth pattern:
a six-spoke, wheel-like pattern visible in cross-section perpendicular to
the c-axis, named after the Spanish word for a sugar-mill cogwheel - O'Donoghue (1971) [4] first described this in the Journal of Gemmology:
"Trapiche Emerald" - Sun, Gao, and Deng (2023) [5] documented a rare "'Star of David' Pattern
Produced by a Trapiche Emerald from Colombia" — a geometric variant
Formation Mechanism
- Six emerald growth sectors form (reflecting the hexagonal crystal structure)
- Inter-sector boundaries are infiltrated by organic matter (bitumen), albite,
and calcite during crystal growth interruptions - The dark "spokes" are inclusion-rich inter-sector zones; the emerald blades
are the six growth sectors - Best seen as a cross-section parallel to the basal plane (perpendicular to c)
Occurrence
- Primarily Coscuez and Peñas Blancas zones — NOT from Chivor
- Exceptional rarity: strong collector premium
- Distinguished from trapiche ruby (Myanmar; different genesis) and
trapiche sapphire (very rare) - The host emerald in trapiche material has Muzo-type properties (Cr-dominant,
three-phase inclusions in the emerald sectors; parisite possible)
Mine Comparison Table
| Feature | Muzo | Chivor | Coscuez |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zone | Western | Eastern | Western |
| Chromophore | Cr dominant | V > Cr | Cr dominant (like Muzo) |
| Colour tone | Warm pure green | Cooler blue-green | Similar to Muzo |
| Parisite | YES — diagnostic | ABSENT | Present (like Muzo) |
| Pyrite | Minor | Abundant — diagnostic | Present |
| Three-phase halite | YES (all Colombian) | YES (all Colombian) | YES (all Colombian) |
| Trapiche association | No | No | YES (Coscuez + Peñas Blancas) |
References
- ↑ 1. Saeseaw, S.; Renfro, N.; Palke, A.; Sun, Z.; McClure, S. (2019). Geographic Origin Determination of Emerald. Gems & Gemology, 55(4), 614–646. DOI: 10.5741/gems.55.4.614.
- ↑ 2. Karampelas, S.; Hauzenberger, C.; Peucat, J.; Fritsch, E. (2019). Emeralds from the Most Important Occurrences Worldwide: Chemical Fingerprinting by LA-ICP-MS. Minerals, 9(9), 561. DOI: 10.3390/min9090561.
- ↑ 3. Schmetzer, K.; Martayan, H.; Ortiz, F. (2020). History of the Chivor Emerald Mine and Its Rediscovery in 1904. Gems & Gemology, 56(1), 66–99. DOI: 10.5741/gems.56.1.66.
- ↑ 4. O'Donoghue, M. (1971). Trapiche Emerald. Journal of Gemmology, 12(8). DOI: 10.15506/jog.1971.12.8.329.
- ↑ 5. Sun, Z.; Gao, J.; Deng, X. (2023). 'Star of David' Pattern Produced by a Trapiche Emerald from Colombia. Journal of Gemmology, 38(7). DOI: 10.15506/jog.2023.38.7.652.