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| The master craftsmen at Jades,
S.A., produce replicas of many famous jadeite masks, tools,
and utensils. This is a replica of the Plumed Serpent and Jaguar
God, a jadeite mosaic lidded vessel found in Tikal, Guatemala.
Poised as if to speak, the original Mayan portrait jar has been
dated 758 A.D. Photo: Anna M. Miller |
Until recently, serious gem and jewelry collectors and buyers looked
to Asia for the purchase of fine jadeite. Traditionally thought
of as a Chinese product, but principally from Myanmar (formerly
Burma), jadeite has been cut and shipped from Hong Kong to the west
for decades. Today, North American jade enthusiasts are finding
jadeite is being mined and cut closer to home. Fine jadeite material
in natural colors ranging from a bright, intense green to soft lilac,
blue, pink, white, and yellow is available from Guatemala, in Central
America. Although jadeite occurs in several locales around the world,
Guatemala has been the least-known as a producer of this material.
Jade is the generic term describing two distinct stones:
nephrite and jadeite. While the two are visually similar, they are
different in mineralogical characteristics. Nephrite and jadeite
are both white in their pure state, with all colors caused by inclusions
of other minerals. Jadeite is the harder and denser of the two,
with a richer, more brilliant range of colors. For these reasons
and because of its scarcity, jadeite is the most precious and sought-after
type of jade. Guatemalan jade is jadeite.
That jadeite in serious quantity and in a rainbow of natural colors
(no heat treatments or other enhancements are used in the Guatemalan
jadeite) is being mined in Guatemala comes as no surprise to researching
geologists and archaeologists who have long believed that all the
native Central American ancient cultures - Olmec, Toltec, Mixtec,
Zapotec, Aztec, and Maya - got their jadeite from Guatemala. In
Jades of Mesoamerica, author and jade expert Fred Ward has compiled
exhaustive research on Guatemalan jadeite used in the ancient Maya
culture. He writes that discoveries of jadeite in the Motagua Valley
area of Guatemala (also known as the Motagua Fault Zone) confirm
the country as the source for most if not all of the jadeite used
by Mesoamericans for three thousand years.
There are some visual differences in the jadeites of Myanmar and
Guatemala, the most obvious of which is color. Although some individual
pieces of Guatemalan jadeite cannot be separated from their Burmese
counterparts (particularly after they are worked into jewelry),
the majority of materials have distinct color and often textural
differences. For example, the intense and highly saturated Imperial
green of Burmese jadeite is not often found in the Guatemalan material.
This does not mean it doesn't exist in Guatemala, rather it simply
means that at this time, ongoing exploration has failed to produce
any sizeable quantity of this highly desirable color.
What is abundant is jadeite in natural colors of lilac, blue, pink,
white, yellow, black, and a unique black with natural precious metal
inclusions, along with many shades of green. Guatemala is now producing
the world's newest jadeite colors, including rainbow jadeite
(several colors in one slab or boulder). Ward is particularly fond
of the black jadeite. Black jadeite from the Motagua Valley
area, he says, represents the creamiest, richest, and
best black jadeite in the world, far exceeding Burma's darkest,
which is gray and can only be sold as charcoal. As far as
the textural differences in the jadeites of Burma and Guatemala,
a high percentage of Guatemalan material has a coarse, granular
crystalline structure, whereas the Burmese material generally exhibits
a finer texture.
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| Galactic Gold is the name
given to this black jadeite with natural inclusions of precious
heavy metals. Laboratory analysis has confirmed the identity
of gold, silver, pyrite, and platinum, among others. Precious
black jadeite with heavy metal inclusions had never been seen
before this material was discovered by the Ridingers in 1987.
Photo: Juan C. Menendez |
For most people, the word jade evokes exotic images
of richly laden Chinese emperors. Few people realize the rich jade
history of the Americas. To the Pre-Columbian people of Mesoamerica,
jade meant life, fertility, and power; it was revered above gold.
The association of the aristocracy with the brighter greens indicated
that they valued jade above all other materials. Just as bright
green jade was reserved for Chinese emperors, in Mesoamerica, bright
green jadeite was reserved for kings and royalty. As an example
of its desirability, the Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortés was
given four jade beads as tribute by Aztec leader Moctezuma, with
the counsel that each bead was worth two loads of gold. The Spanish
conquistadores, lusting only for gold, dismissed these treasures
as nothing more than green rocks.
Following the Spanish conquest of the native culture and religion,
and in order to hide the jadeite from the conquerors, Indians withdrew
from jade mining and carving for generations. So much time lapsed
and so many generations passed that no one knew where to find jade;
the mines were lost to the world from the 1500s until the late 20th
century.
The rediscovery of the Maya jadeite source is as exciting as any
Indiana Jones movie. In the 1960s, archeologists followed scientific
work begun after World War II by William Foshag, the Smithsonian's
curator of geology. They were all searching for the source of Mesoamerican
jadeite. Jade is found in several locales in Guatemala: in the departments
of Izabal, El Progreso, Zacapa, Baja Verapaz, and El Quiche. It
takes an expert's eye to find jade because the boulders are generally
covered with thick, black-brown, or gray rind, making it almost
impossible to distinguish jade from ordinary rock.
One of the most fascinating of the jadeite discovery stories is
the true adventure of an American couple, Mary Lou and Jay Ridinger.
In 1975, Mary Lou Ridinger, an archeologist, used her extensive
background knowledge of ancient Mayan culture and art to concentrate
on a single location in Guatemala, the remote Motagua Valley. It
was a Eureka! moment for her and husband Jay when the
search finally paid off with the discovery of in situ jadeite boulders.
Later, further exploration in the valley produced jadeite in a variety
of colors.
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| Using the basic designs of
her ancestors, this master carver is aided by a power tool to
speed up carving on tough jadeite. Photo: Anna M. Miller. |
Even more exciting, the Ridingers identified centuries-old Mayan
jadeite work sites with tools and small bits of pottery where outdoor
carving factories had actually operated. Still another mystery was
solved when the Ridingers found an in situ source of the foamy blue-green
jadeite that was favored by Olmec carvers and often found in Costa
Rican graves. That particular discovery proved that both the Olmec
and Maya mined jade in the Motagua Valley. Due to the diligent work
of the Ridingers, the Mayan jade quarries were reopened for the
first time since the Spanish conquest.
The Ridingers' company, Jades, S.A., opened in 1974 and remains
the largest jade mining and cutting operation in Guatemala. The
Jades, S.A. factory showroom, in Antigua, Guatemala, has become
internationally known for its variety of beautiful jadeite jewelry
and fine quality carvings. The jade factory is well known among
tourists, international celebrities, and politicians; in March 1999,
President Clinton spent two hours at the factory learning about
jadeite and picking out gifts for staff and family. Museums have
commissioned Jades, S.A. to produce replicas of famous Mayan jade
masks. The handmade replicas (all labeled as such) are produced
by Mayan descendants who are just beginning to realize the impact
local jadeite had on their ancestors.
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