Ruby and sapphire origins greatly affect the values of these prized gems. Learn where these stones occur and how inclusions can help identify their sources.
Although non-gem corundum occurs abundantly all over the world, gem-quality ruby and sapphire are significantly rarer. Their sources are also more restricted. Since ruby and sapphire origins play a major role in determining the value of these gems, gemologists, jewelers, and consumers alike should learn where these prized stones come from.
Determining ruby and sapphire origins can be difficult, but the inclusions in these gems can help identify where they were mined.
Ruby and Sapphire Origins and Geology
Both ruby and sapphire are corundum, just with different colors. Gem-quality red corundum is considered ruby, while all other colors of gem-quality corundum, including colorless, are sapphire.
The mineral corundum forms in metamorphosed crystalline limestones and dolomites, as well as other metamorphic rock types such as gneiss and schist. It also occurs in igneous rocks, such as granite and nepheline syenite. Miners often find gem corundums in placer deposits.
Interested in this topic?
This article is also a part of our Ruby Specialist Mini Course, in the unit Introduction to Ruby.
You can learn more about the formation and chemistry of rubies and sapphires here.
Asia
Myanmar (Burma)
Ruby historically comes from the Mogok stone tract. The history of the mines here is long, complex, and turbulent. Gems occur in a gravel layer called byon at a depth of 20 to 100 feet. Miners recover them by washing and screening with broad screens, then handpicking promising pebbles. Corundum originates in metamorphic marbles that have largely weathered away. This is the source of the world's finest rubies.
Kashmir
Fine sapphires occur in northern India in the NW Himalayas at an elevation of nearly 15,000 feet, in a deposit snowed under most of the year. Gems occur in a pegmatite and in the valley below, in surface debris. These sources are now exhausted.
Extremely scarce, Kashmir sapphires have a cloudiness due to inclusions and an extremely good blue color, making them greatly desired.
Pakistan
Ruby and spinel of fine quality occur in the Hunza Valley on the Pakistan Side of the Kashmir Valley. The color is comparable to Burma ruby but the material is heavily flawed.
Thailand
The areas of major importance here are Chantabun and Battambang. The corundum deposits have only been worked in a major way in modern times. Miners find gems in a sandy layer within 6 to 20 feet of the surface and recover them by washing.
Thai rubies rose to importance on the market because of the scarcity of Burmese gems.
Cambodia
Pailin produces some of the world's finest sapphires, but the country isn't a significant ruby source.
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka is a source of many colors of sapphire, as well as ruby and star gems. Gems occur here in a gravel layer known as illam at a depth of up to 50 feet. Miners wash and screen the material and recover gems by hand.
Sri Lankan ruby isn't as good as Burmese material, and the sapphires are often pale in color but can be very large.
Afghanistan
Ruby of fine color has come from Jegdalek, near Kabul. This is an ancient source of many of the fine stones of ancient times.
India
Mysore usually produces poor-quality rubies but a significant amount of star ruby. However, occasionally, this area produces stones of excellent quality.
Japan
Amphibole-zoisite rock on Mt. Gongen, Hodono Valley, Ehime Prefecture has yielded transparent crystals to 5 cm.
Vietnam
Vietnam produces rubies as well as sapphires in a variety of colors.
Nepal
Nepal produces some gemmy ruby crystals, typically with heavy color zoning.
Australia
Anakie, Queensland produces some ruby as well as sapphire in blue, green, and yellow shades, all in alluvial deposits. Some fine green gems are known, as well as an occasional excellent blue gem.
Other occurrences include New South Wales, especially the Inverell district (often referred to as the New English fields). Victoria also produces green sapphire.
Ruby has been found in the Harts Range, Northern Territory.
United States
Montana
Yogo Gulch is a well-known locality for fine blue sapphire of very good color that occurs in igneous dikes. The crystals are very flattened and waterfall-like, so it's difficult to cut large, full-cut gems from them. Crystals occur in many different colors and are usually quite small, but the blue stones are extremely fine. Often zoned, this material may have a curious metallic-like luster.
The gravels of the Missouri River, Rock Creek, Dry Cottonwood Creek, and the Gem Mountain Sapphire Mine in Philipsburg also produce sapphires.
Ruby is uncommon here.
North Carolina
At Cowee Creek, in Macon County, small rubies and sapphires are found in stream gravels and soil. The quality is usually poor, but an occasional fine, small ruby is found.
The Cherokee Mine at Franklin yields rubies and sapphires.
South America
Brazil
The Matto Grosso area has produced sapphires.
Colombia
Miners have found blue and violet sapphires, many showing a distinct color change, near Mercaderes, Cauca, Colombia, probably originating in alkalic basalts. Crystals are prismatic and rounded, up to 3 cm in size. Typical colors include blue (somewhat pale), green-brown, and violetish, but some yellow, pink, and red crystals also occur. Some star material also exists. The stones are rich in iron and poor in titanium. Metallic rutile crystal inclusions are typical.
Europe
Gem-quality corundum is occasionally found in the Czech Republic, Finland, Greenland, Norway, and Russia.
In Scotland, facetable blue sapphire crystals, up to about 45 mm in diameter, occur at Loch Roag, Isle of Lewis, in the Outer Hebrides. Their colors are variable and sector zoning has been observed, with a paragenesis similar to that of Pailin, Cambodia. Cut stones usually weigh a maximum of 2-3 carats.
Africa
Tanzania
Large ruby of fine color and quality is found in green, massive chromiferous zoisite ("ruby-in-zoisite"). The crystals are usually opaque, and the rock as a whole is cut as a decorative material, but occasionally some small areas of this ruby are transparent enough to facet.
Many colors of sapphire are found in the vicinity of Morogoro, Tanga Province, along with some ruby. The Umba River Valley is also a source of fine sapphires in a wide range of colors.
Zimbabwe
Sapphires of various colors are found here, often zoned with a creamy-white core and blue outer zone, or vice versa. The well-formed crystals usually measure up to 3 inches in diameter. At the Baruta Mine in Northeast Zimbabwe, a deep blue crystal of 3,100 carats was found.
Zimbabwe is also a source of black star sapphire. However, sapphires from here remain relatively unknown on the market.
Kenya
Excellent ruby is known from a small ruby mine. The ruby has a pinkish but fine color and usually occurs in small sizes. Sapphires have also been found.
Mozambique
Montepuez produces rubies and sapphires.
Madagascar
Madagascar produces rubies as well as blue and pink sapphires.
Malawi
Sapphires were found at Chimwadzulu Hill around 1958.
Namibia
Opaque ruby suitable for cabochons occurs at Namaqualand.
What Can Inclusions Reveal About Ruby and Sapphire Origins?
Tanzania: sapphires may contain crystals of chlorapatite, pyrite, magnetite, biotite, graphite, phlogopite, zircon, and spinel. Umba River Valley sapphires may contain apatite, graphite, and pyrrhotite. Longido sapphires may contain pargasite, spinel, zoisite.
Brazil (Jauru, Matto Grosso): rounded gas-filled discs that resemble bubbles.
Burma (Mogok): short rutile needles at 60⁰ angles; silk consisting of hollow tubes plus crystals of rutile, spinel, calcite, mica, garnet, zircon crystals with haloes; color swirls known as treacle.
Thailand: feathers, canals and tube-like liquid inclusions; flat, brownish cavities; twin planes; crystals of niobite, almandine, apatite, pyrrhotite, plagioclase crystals in sapphires. Rutile is absent.
Sri Lanka: long rutile needles; healing cracks; zircon crystals with haloes; flakes of biotite and phlogopite mica; feathers with irregular liquid hoses inside; color zoning is frequent; crystals of spinel, graphite, ilmenite, apatite.
Cambodia (Pailin): specks of uranian pyrochlore (ruby red color, very small).
Kashmir: yellow and brown feathers and thin films; liquid-filled canals; veil-like lines at 60⁰ and 120⁰; cloudy haziness; negative crystals (cavities); flat films; rods and tubes.
Australia: discoloration and twin lamellae (plates); rutile crystals; liquid-filled feathers, flat cavities; color zoning is frequent.
Nepal: undulating veils, strong color zoning, prismatic crystals, margarite.
Malawi (Chimwadzulu Hill): fine tubes; small black crystals and short rods; healed fissures; color zoning.
Dr. Joel E. Arem has more than 60 years of experience in the world of gems and minerals. After obtaining his Ph.D. in Mineralogy from Harvard University, he has published numerous books that are still among the most widely used references and guidebooks on crystals, gems and minerals in the world.
Co-founder and President of numerous organizations, Dr. Arem has enjoyed a lifelong career in mineralogy and gemology. He has been a Smithsonian scientist and Curator, a consultant to many well-known companies and institutions, and a prolific author and speaker. Although his main activities have been as a gem cutter and dealer, his focus has always been education. joelarem.com
Get started with the International Gem Society’s free guide to gemstone identification. Join our weekly newsletter & get a free copy of the Gem ID Checklist!