Weird Natural Pearl of Unknown Origin

CortezPearls

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Hello friends,

I come bearing photos and a story about this weird natural pearl that a fisherman brought to us: the pearl was not large, baroque shaped 8 mm in diameter, but it had a very unusual structure: seemed calcitic and aragonitic in nature, so kind of like a cross between a scallop and a nacreous pearl. The fisherman said it was obtained from a snail but could not tell us which kind. The region? The Sea of Cortez.
Anyway, I used the UV lamp on it and the pearl displayed the most amazing ORANGE (yes, a bright Penitentiary inmate orange) glow I have ever seen. unfortunately I had no time to take a better photo of the UV fluorescence effect...but it was amazing!

Have any of you ever heard of such a thing? Any pointers? I am befuddled.
Thank You :)
Perla Barroca Desconocida (3) (Copy).jpgPerla Desconocida en UV (Copy).jpg
 
The color is similar to the lining of Lewis's Moon Snail (Lunatia lewisii).

They range from Alaska to Baja, but I'm not certain about la Mar de Cortez.

I have some shells with blisters that present with similar features. I'll post when I find them.
 
Super cool. It does put me in mind of a scallop pearl. Even cooler -- that local fluorescence.!
 
Super cool. It does put me in mind of a scallop pearl. Even cooler -- that local fluorescence.!

My thoughts too at first glance. Then I thought otherwise. This pearl presents with terraced aragonite interspersed with calcite, where many of the scallop pearls present with the noticeably clear outer layers and the dimpled (moon-like) surface from the foliated structure.

The appearance supports the fisherman's claim this originated from a gastropod.
 
I've been checking in with a cell phone. I can't wait to see it on the big screen! :)
 
What an amazing find and super cool that it glows orange!
 
The color is similar to the lining of Lewis's Moon Snail (Lunatia lewisii).
They range from Alaska to Baja, but I'm not certain about la Mar de Cortez.
I have some shells with blisters that present with similar features. I'll post when I find them.

Hey Dave! This might be a related species (if not the same one)...we have that shell here in Guaymas, it's actually very common around the farm. This is the way it looks (not my photo, but Wikipedia's):
Euspira_lewisii_3.jpg

Could you please confirm the orange glow???

I just wish I could have purchased it :(

Thank you all :D
 
For the sake of debate, can you tell for sure what kind of nacre it is without magnification? You, of course, have in-depth observation experience in the field that I cannot match.

Here is what I understand:

Bivalve nacre has a smooth interlamellar membrane which causes the nacre to grow in step-like layers. (Terraced)

Picture2.jpg

Gastropod nacre has nanopores in the interlamellar membrane which causes the nacre to grow in towers. (Columnar)

Picture3.jpg

Foliated nacre grows in monoplacophorans which have no membrane. Foliated aragonite is thought to be an evolutionary precursor to nacre. And it's beautiful under the electron microscope!
Monoplacophorans are single-shelled mollusks that dwell at great depths and were thought to be extinct until living monoplacophorans were discovered in 1952. Foliated nacre is rare.

Picture1.jpg

So, are you saying you see foliated calcite alternating with terraced nacre? Are the bumps evidence of foliated calcite?
 
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I think you are correct GemGeek...that is what I think I saw. I've only seen this once a couple of years ago...with a Pteria sterna pearl I sent to Spain for analysis.
But this pearl...the nacre looked like it was that of the Turbo sp shell (Turban Snail), you know: silvery gray. And then it had the columnar calcite and both mixed into each other, with areas where one would be more abundant. Of course, this is a "dynamic effect"; the photo does not do any justice.
The bumps might just be there because the pearl is very baroque, don't know if the calcite is responsible for it.
Weird, weird, weird!
 
lattice.jpgDouglas: That appears as they do locally. It's the larger of the snail species and is in the greatest numbers, so chances are it's the species we seek. I'll need to rummage through some boxes to find those blisters for UV fluorescence and photos.

Blaire: Identifying from photos is undoubtedly guess work, but there are few questions I ask myself on presentation.

Very often I look at what I don't see. I've seen numerous pearls from pectenidae (scallops) and almost every time they present with a "dipped in honey" surface, but with dimples much like a golf ball, and less so... the moon which would have a sharper line at the ridge of the crater. You almost never see this in freshwater pearls or most naturals (which tend to be over-mature). Calcite can occur two ways. One by lay up and the other by reversion.

High quality cultured pearls present this way. They're harvested post juvenile growth before calcite occludes the surface. Calcification is extended in clams and reduced in scallops. To the naked eye these are discernible features. Even at early stages of growth, clam pearls although nacreous are markedly calcitic. Many over-mature scallop pearls tend to remain clear at the surface. This is likely due to the age groups of the species themselves. Clams live about 6-7 years while scallops can attain much higher, upwards of 80 years has been described in rock scallops.

So no, I'm not suggesting foliated calcite in the presence of terraced aragonite insomuch as randomly ordered calcite whether by nature, senescence or molecular changes over time.

This topic is the crux of the current work that Ana and I are currently up to in the lab. It all started when she posed the question "If mussel shells appear blue, then where are the blue or green pearls?" Had she not asked "green", I might have missed her point, but immediately sought a solution in rock oysters (Pododesmus macrochisma), because the shells are markedly green.

I'm still waiting on the images from the SEM, but we're certain podos are foliated calcite. The real beauty of this particular species is the marked distinction in pigmentation, which is seasonally, hormonally controlled. There is no in between. Either it's green or it's perfectly clear and the transition is quick. We are examining very closely that margin to determine how the nacre is modified. Incidentally, I don't just theorize this in pearls. It is a feature I see on the outside of latticed shell structures. I've posted an image of a manila clam (Venerupis philipinarium) to help explain this. It's a three year old specimen. Ignoring the umbo we see growth in years two and three. Looking at the triangle between green and red lines we see a distinct pattern involving changes in pigmentation that are nearly replicated in consecutive years. It's really difficult to observe nacreous modifications on these shells because of calcite obscuring the views, whereas podo pearls, it's almost non-existent. By the way, pearl oysters, mussels (fresh or salt) and scallops are latticed structures. Many gastropods are too, but some are not, including Lewis's Moon Snail, and supports Douglas' observation which "seemed calcitic and aragonitic in nature".

The very best part of this research is I'm quite certain we'll determine markers that will distinguish fresh and saltwater pearls as well pointing toward certain species.
 
Wow, thanks for that. I mostly see research focused on bivalves. More, please! :)
 
I vote 5* for this thread, top marks for unique, rare pearl and for the science! Way to go, Douglas, for capturing the photos, and posting. Too bad no capturing the pearl, :(, but it's still pretty exciting reading what you, GG and Dave are discussing!

Remember, we can rate these threads, PGers
 
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Hello Team! I have found another weird pearl!!! Stay Tuned! I just need to release myself from work here! It's a unique beauty and...another one that "got away" :(
 
Nothing to contribute but applause to our learned pearl scholars. Discussions like this are so interesting to just a pearl wearer.
 
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