Abstract
 Vietnamese research in geology has  indicated a high potential for gemstones in Vietnam and has found in  this last decade numerous gem deposits, especially ruby and sapphire. In  northern Vietnam, gem corundums are found in the Luc Yen, Yen Bai and  Quy Chau areas, in primary deposits hosted by metamorphic rocks and in  placers. In secondary deposits, ruby and sapphire are associated with  gem spinel and garnet. In southern Vietnam, sapphires are related to  alkaline basalts, with blue sapphires being economic. Sapphires are  recovered with gem zircons and peridots in placers. Aquamarine, beryl,  topaz, quartz crystals (amethyst, citrine, morion), tektite, fluorite,  opal, chalcedony, jadeite, nephrite and amazonite are the other  gemstones exploited in Vietnam. Ruby, sapphires and pearls provide  important commercial exchanges in the gemstones markets of Vietnam and  other foreign countries.
Introduction
 Figure 1. Map of Vietnam showing the location of gemstone occurrences.
 In the late 1980s, reports emerge from  Vietnam of a major discovery of high quality rubies in the northern part  of the country, from deposits in the Luc Yen and Yen Bai areas. Ruby  occurred in colluvial and alluvial sediments, and the primary source of  ruby was suspected to be marble and pegmatite. Placer deposits of ruby  were recovered by farmers during routine agricultural activities.  Following the discovery of ruby in Luc Yen in 1987, others occurrences  of gemstones were found in Thuong Xuan (aquamarine and topaz), Co Phuong  (jadeite, nephrite), Thach Khoan (beryl, quartz), Quy Chau (ruby) and  in the Dak Lak and Binh Thuan provinces (sapphire). After these  discoveries, gemstone exploitation really started in 1988 with the  establishment of Vinagemco by the government—a state-owned company for  the investigation, mining, processing, and trading of gem materials in  Vietnam (Fig. 1). The purpose of this paper is to realize an overview of  the gemstones occurrences in Vietnam with a special dedication to ruby  and sapphire.
Distribution of gemstones
Ruby and sapphire deposits
Figure 2. Geological map of Yen Bai area with locations of ruby and sapphire deposits.
In northern Vietnam
Yen Bai mining district
The primary corundum occurrences of Yen  Bai (Fig. 2) occur within the high-grade metamorphic gneisses of the Day  Nui Con Voi range (Pham Van 1996, 2003), which extends to the southeast  from the Ailao Shan in Yunnan (China). This range is bounded by lateral  strike-slip faults forming the major Cenozoic geological discontinuity  in East Asia known as the Ailao Shan-Red River shear zone (Phan Trong et al. 1998, 1999, Leloup et al.  2001). The Day Nui Con Voi range is composed of high-grade metamorphic  rocks with sillimanite-biotite-garnet gneisses, mica-schists with local  alternation of marbles and amphibolites.
Corundum occurs as:
grey to blue sapphires in garnet-sillimanite mica schists and gneisses which contain leucosome and leucocratic granitoidic dykes (Truc Lau gneisses and Khe Nhan meta-pegmatite);
in amphibolites converted by the effect of metasomatism in biotite schists with some layers containing centimetre-sized grey to dark sapphires (north of Tan Huong mine, km 15 occurrence;
as rubies in large marble boudins intercalated with gneiss, mica schist and amphibolite (Tan Huong drill cores). These marbles represent previous limestones intergrown with mudstones, which were sheared and metamorphosed during the tectonic activity along the Red River shear zone.
The gem deposits are placers exploited along the shear zone as in Tan Huong and Truc Lau (Fig. 2). In Tan Huong, ruby was found and exploited by local farmers in 1994. In 1996, the deposit was managed and exploited by the Vietnam National Gem and Gold Corporation (Fig. 3). From 1994 to 1996, hundreds kilograms of rubies and star rubies were exploited illegally and sold to foreign dealers. The area is composed of metamorphic gneiss, micaceous-quartz schist, marble and amphibolite of the Nui Voi complex that have been intruded by granites, syenites and pegmatite dykes. Ruby and spinel have been found in the magmatic rocks in minor grains as well as in marbles (Nguyen Kinh Quoc et al. 1995). In placers, ruby grains are eroded but the crystals present a prismatic shape, are from 1.0 to 19 mm long, and range in colour from red to reddish and purplish to red. The main associated gem mineral are red and octahedral spinels and blue trapiche-like sapphires. In April 1997, two ruby crystals of 2.58 kg (Fig. 4) and 1.96 kg (star ruby) respectively, of very high quality, were found and declared State treasure.
Ruby Crystal photo image
Figure 4. The ruby called Star of Vietnam weighing 2.58 kg that was found in the Tan Huong mine.
The Truc Lau paleoplacer consists of 10 m thick of sediments overlying the bedrock. The rubies and blue sapphires are contained in a gravel layer of 5 m thickness that is overlain by a 3.5 m of quaternary sediments and 1-1.5 m of soil. In 2002, up to two boulders (1-2 kg) per month made of pink sapphire and star ruby were recovered from this paleoplacer.
In the Tan Dong placer (Fig. 2), assemblages of blue sapphire-margarite-plagioclase are the remainder of metasomatised pegmatites.
Luc Yen mining district
The ruby and sapphire deposits of Luc Yen (Fig, 2) are set in moderate to high temperature recrystallized marble units of Upper Proterozoic-Lower Cambrian age in the eastern side of the Red River shear zone of the Lo Gam tectonic zone (Hoang Quang et al. 1999, Garnier, 2003, Pham Van 2003).
Primary ruby occurs as:
disseminated crystals within marbles with phlogopite, dravite, margarite, pyrite, rutile, spinel, edenite and graphite (Bai Da Lan, An Phu, Minh Tien, Nuoc Ngap, Luc Yen and Khoan Thong mines);veinlets associated with calcite, dravite, pyrite, margarite and phlogopite (An Phu mine); fissures with graphite, pyrite, phlogopite and margarite (Bai Da Lan mine); Minh Tien region (Fig. 5).
Secondary deposits consist of gravel concentration in karst pockets and in alluvial fans in the Luc Yen valleys (Kane et al.. 1991). The gem-bearing valleys are often narrow, small depressions ranging from 0.5 to 0.7 km2 in area, but most common 2-3 km2. The corundums are pink, purple to red (Fig. 6), and blue and colourless sapphires coexist with rubies as well as with grey to brown and bi-pyramidal sapphires and trapiche rubies. Associated gem minerals include red, pink and pale blue spinel, gem quality multi-colour tourmaline and garnet. The great variety and high quality of the gem material recovered in the placers make the gemstone market in the center of Luc Yen town opened daily for dealers since 1987 (Fig. 7).
The ruby and sapphire deposits of Luc Yen (Fig, 2) are set in moderate to high temperature recrystallized marble units of Upper Proterozoic-Lower Cambrian age in the eastern side of the Red River shear zone of the Lo Gam tectonic zone (Hoang Quang et al. 1999, Garnier, 2003, Pham Van 2003).
Primary ruby occurs as:
disseminated crystals within marbles with phlogopite, dravite, margarite, pyrite, rutile, spinel, edenite and graphite (Bai Da Lan, An Phu, Minh Tien, Nuoc Ngap, Luc Yen and Khoan Thong mines);veinlets associated with calcite, dravite, pyrite, margarite and phlogopite (An Phu mine); fissures with graphite, pyrite, phlogopite and margarite (Bai Da Lan mine); Minh Tien region (Fig. 5).
Secondary deposits consist of gravel concentration in karst pockets and in alluvial fans in the Luc Yen valleys (Kane et al.. 1991). The gem-bearing valleys are often narrow, small depressions ranging from 0.5 to 0.7 km2 in area, but most common 2-3 km2. The corundums are pink, purple to red (Fig. 6), and blue and colourless sapphires coexist with rubies as well as with grey to brown and bi-pyramidal sapphires and trapiche rubies. Associated gem minerals include red, pink and pale blue spinel, gem quality multi-colour tourmaline and garnet. The great variety and high quality of the gem material recovered in the placers make the gemstone market in the center of Luc Yen town opened daily for dealers since 1987 (Fig. 7).
Rubies and sapphires have been mined since 1987  from the placer deposits of Doi Ty, Doi San, Mo Coi and Quy Hop (Pham  Van, 2003). The corundum occurs principally in the Quy Chau area as:very rare and uneconomic rubies disseminated in marbles associated with pyrite and graphite;
in placers which form the economic  deposit. In the Doi San and Doi Ty area, granitic intrusions resulted in  the injection of pegmatites and the formation of calcium-magnesium-rich  skarns in the surrounding marbles, amphibolites, gneiss and  micaschists. Rubies were neither observed in the skarn nor in the  pegmatite. The genetic origin of this ruby has remained unclear since  oxygen isotopes and fluid inclusions studies on these rubies show that  they their isotopic signature was metamorphic and similar to that found  for typical ruby-hosted marble deposits in northern Vietnam (Garnier,  2003; Giuliani et al., 2003a, b). The gem material consists of ruby,  with smaller amount of blue to violet and orange sapphire. Ruby tends to  be slightly purplish red in hue position; their crystals are usually in  hexagonal prism and barrel shape (Fig. 8).
In Southern Vietnam
The sapphire deposits of southern Vietnam consist of placers formed by the erosion of alkali-basalt flows (Smith et al.  1995). The sapphires present usually prismatic and pyramidal shapes.  The size of the crystals is up to 2-7 mm long, but in Dak Nong, Ngoc Yeu  and Da Ban areas they sometimes reach 30-40 mm in diameter. Their  colour is usually dark blue, sometimes green blue, sky blue, and rarely  honey-yellow (except in the Tien Co area in Binh Thuan province).
Several mining district were exploited from 1985 to present. These include:
The Dak Nong area (Dak Lak province)
Here the sapphires are found in weathered  residual soils lying above the flows and also in the river and stream  fans (Tran Xuan Toan et al. 1995). Generally, the alluvial  corundum corresponds to xenocrysts found in situ in basalts (Hoang  Nguyen & Flower 1998). The colour of the sapphires ranges from dark  blue, through blue, green to yellow. The crystals occur as broken  fragments, but with prismatic and bipyramidal shapes and dimensions of  up to 1.5 cm long and 0.2-0.4 cm wide.
The Ma Lam and Da Ban area (Binh Thuan province)
The sapphires of these areas show  barrel-shaped habits. The stones range from very dark blue to very deep  blue. The alluvial corundum sometimes shows glassy-looking margins that  indicate high temperature corrosion—indirect evidence of magma  transport. In the Da Ban area megacrysts of dark-blue sapphires are  sometimes found within alkali-basalts.
Diamond occurrences
Although diamonds are not yet discovered  in the country, geological investigations in the north-western part of  Vietnam and the Tay Nguyen Highland (Fig. 1) provides promising areas  for primary diamond discovery. Recently, the occurrences of lamproïtes  (alkali lamprophyres) were reported in the Lai Chau province in the  north-western part of Vietnam. In Tay Nguyen (Kon Tum province),  kimberlite dykes are discovered and the rocks are made of olivine,  phlogopite, garnet, pyrope and perovskite. In the year 2000, small  grains of diamonds (smaller than 2 mm in diameter) were recovered from  placers in Tay Nguyen (Pham Binh, 2000). More detailed studies and  investigation are still needed to prove the occurrences of diamond in  Vietnam.
Emerald occurrences
Up to now, emerald and chrysoberyl have  not yet been discovered in Vietnam, but the geological formations and  structures in Ba Be (Bac Kan province) and Mo Ngot (Vinh Phu province)  represent potential areas for emerald and chrysoberyl (Nguyen Kinh Quoc,  1995). 
Beryl (var. aquamarine) and topaz occurrences
Xuan Le (Thanh Hoa province)
The first discovery of aquamarine and  topaz in Xuan Le area was made in 1985 by a field geologist. Aquamarine  is hosted in a swarm of pegmatites, hundreds of metres long and 0.4-5.0 m  thick, which contained quartz, K-feldspar, plagioclase, muscovite,  biotite and accessory minerals as black tourmaline, colorless topaz, and  zircon. The pegmatites are related to the intrusion of syeno-granite  and biotite granite. Aquamarine of high gem quality has a hexagonal  prismatic shape, is sea blue-coloured, transparent and with the size of  the crystals from 5 to 20 cm long, 1 to 6 cm in diameter. These are  exploited in elluvial deposits by local farmers.
Topaz in Xuan Le is related to pegmatites with a  reserve potential about 41.53 tons (Nguyen Kinh Quoc 1995). The topaz is  exploited, mainly in placers, which yield high gem quality material  suitable for jewellery. Topaz crystals are usually broken by the  alluvial transport, but they have colourless or yellowish colors and  high transparency. Accessory minerals are beryl, tourmaline, fluorite,  quartz (including smoked quartz) and garnet.
After 1985, numerous occurrences of topaz were  found in the Bao Loc and Tu Le areas in the Lam Dong and Yen Bai  provinces, respectively.
Thach Khoan (Vinh Phuc province)
Good gem quality beryls are exploited in  Thach Khoan. The crystals are transparent to translucent, 3-4 cm in  diameter, sometimes 10-30 cm long, and have a sky-blue colour (Fig. 9).  In 1999, a crystal of beryl that weighed 75 kilograms, was displayed in  the Geological Museum of Vietnam. Accessory minerals are quartz, black  tourmaline, feldspar, garnet and kyanite.
 Gem in Vinh Phuc
Tourmaline
Tourmaline-bearing pegmatite has been  reported in the region of Luc Yen (Nguyen Kinh Quoc 1995), but up to now  gem quality tourmalines have not been found in situ. They  occurred in alluvial gravels associated with gem-corundum or in a  weathered crust. The crystals have striated prisms with rounded  triangular cross-sections and are variously terminated. The Luc Yen  tourmaline has variable colours ranging from green, brown, black to  yellow (Fig. 10). Multicolor crystals, usually include alternating pink,  purple and yellowish-green colour. Colour zoning is also commonly  observed from the centre to the periphery of the crystals, with the  combination of pink, purple and dark-green colours being common.
Spinel
Gem spinels were discovered at Tan Huong,  Luc Yen and Quy Chau in primary and secondary ruby and sapphire  deposits. In Luc Yen mining district, and in Tan Huong mine, spinel  crystals are found in dolomitic marbles together with  calcite-phlogopite-humite of metamorphic-metasomatic origin. The  crystals vary in size from 1 x 1 cm to 3 x 3 cm. They have octahedral  form and red to brownish red colour. Crystals of spinel that are  recovered from placers are transparent and used for gem cutting, while  bigger crystals in their host-rock are usually translucent to opaque and  used only as collector’s specimens. 
Zircon
Zircon and basaltic sapphires are usually  found together in placers from Kon Tum, Dak Lak, Gia Lai, Lam Dong and  Binh Thuan provinces. Their colour ranges from colorless to yellow,  orange, brownish-orange, brownish to reddish-brown. The habit crystals  are combinations of the bi-pyramid and the tetragonal prism. Crystals  are usually corroded. 
Peridot 
 Peridot is found mainly in the Ham Rong  and Bien Ho basaltic areas of the Gia Lai province (Fig. 1). Peridots  are collected from lherzolite xenoliths within the basalt flows. Gem  peridot is olive-green to yellowish-green (Fig. 11) with crystals  reaching up to 2 x 4 x 4 cm. However, most of peridot occurs in small  grains that average 0.6 to 1.5 cm in diameter. Today, peridot is  exploited in eluvial and stream gravels by local residents. In some  places, the peridot-bearing layers are reached by hand digging 5 m-deep  pits.  
Tektites 
Tektites have been found in many places,  from the north to the south of Vietnam. Essentially they are recovered  from the highlands of the Tay Nguyen province (Kon Tum and Lam Dong) and  the Phu Quoc island. Some occurrences are located near the border  between Vietnam and Laos. Almost all of the tewktites are cut as  cabochons, or carved into cameos.
Pearl 
Today, pearls are cultivated mainly at  Cat Ba, Ha Long (Quang Ninh province), Nha Trang (Khanh Hoa province),  Con Dao (Vung Tau province) and Phu Quoc (Kien Giang province) (Fig. 1).  The pearl farms have been developed with the training and the  supervision of Japanese experts. Today, the farms operate with only  Vietnamese technicians. Four farms. Which are located at Cat Ba and Ha  Long, belong to the Ha Noi Gem and Gold Corporation. Two farms in Nha  Trang, and about six farms in Phu Quoc are joint-stock companies with a  Japanese partners. Trial harvests have produced pearls with thicker  nacre and better lustre than that presently available from both Japanese  and Chinese akoyas. From 2001, Vietnamese akoyas will be cultured from  spat-reared stock, with an expected yield of 1000 kan (1 kan = 3.745 kg)  by the year 2008. Vietnamese akoyas (Fig. 12) range in size from 2 to 8  mm, and are produced in natural golden colour due to the good water  quality and protected environment in which the pearls are cultivated  Black South Sea pearls are now being cultured in Phuc Quoc. These vary  in size from 4 to 8 mm. In Vietnam, 80 per cent of the annual cultured  pearl production is exported, with 20 per cent remaining for the  domestic markets.
Other gemstones
Quartz is one of the most abundant and  widely distributed minerals in Vietnam. Varieties include rock crystal,  amethyst, and rose quartz. Rock crystals and smoky quartz are found in  pegmatite at Xuan Le (Thanh Hoa), Ky Son (Nghe An), Thach Khoan (Vinh  Phu). Amethyst with an attractive purple colour, and high transparency,  is found in Don Duong (Lang Son province) and Chu Boc (Gia Lai province)  . Rose quartz has been found in Da Nang, morion in Loc Tan (Lam Dong).
Jadeite and nephrite were found in Co Phuong (Son  La province). It has a greenish colour and is only used for the carving  of fine-art products. Agate has been found in Loc Ninh (Tay Ninh  province) and is used for necklaces. Fluorite is distributed widely in  Dong Pao (Lai Chau province) and Xuan Lanh (Phu Yen province) Greenish  amazonite is found in syenitic pegmatites in An Phu (Luc Yen district)  and in Thach Khoan (Vinh Phu province). However, the amazonite only  occurs in opaque crystals that are used only for carving.
Conclusion
Up to now, the main economic deposits and  occurrences of gemstones in Vietnam are ruby, sapphire, aquamarine and  topaz. These gemstones are distributed in different metallogenetic  provinces in northern Vietnam as ruby in the marbles from the Day Nui  Con Voi metamorphic belt-Red River Fault Zone, topaz and aquamarine from  the pegmatites related to acid magmatism in the Thanh Hoa and Vinh Phuc  provinces. In southern Vietnam, potential economic deposits of blue  sapphire, zircon and peridot are present in the Cenozoic basaltic  igneous province. In these areas, additional new gem occurrences have  been found, but detailed exploration has not yet been carried out.  Deposits of other minerals such as spinel, tourmaline, quartz crystals  are widely distributed in the country and have an important role for  Vietnam gemstones industry. New discoveries of gemstones occurrences in  various region of Vietnam suggest that in the future exploration will  reveal additional deposits of economical significance.
 





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