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Pearl Jewelry - The Story of Pearl Hunters

As long as pearls have been known to people, they have been a highly sought commodity for their beauty. It's only in recent times however that the industry has taken the hunt for the perfect pearl to a whole different level. Today, the shiny orbs that we see on in display in jewelry stores have actually almost always been grown in farms.

That's a far cry from the dangerous extraction and collection methods used before the invention of modern technology. In the past, not more than 100 years ago, the only way to retrieve pearls was by diving in lakes, floods and the ocean to pick them up, one at the time. The unfortunate divers who'se job it was to do this, were often poor and lured by the relative large sums they could get. The diver would sometimes have to dive as deep as 100 feet on one single breath of air. In order to preserve air and to stay submerged the longest, the divers would hold on to heavy stones on the way down.

Naturally, this dangerous activity was reserved for the desperate or the powerless - in many cases slaves or extremely poor peasents. Today, this method is all but obsolete in most places of the world. The cheaper cultured pearls have become popular and are many times the only pearls available to the consumer.

There are however still a few isolated areas that practice this old art of pearl diving. Some of the finest natural pearl speciments come from the gulf of Bahrain. Here, divers still risk their health to retrieve what are considered the top of the crop in the world. In fact, Bahrain wants no part of the sale of cultured pearls, banned from trade. Bahrain is one of the few places on earth that does an active job in trying to preserve the natural habitat and waters from pollution.

It's an interesting story and one that continues to fascinate buyers around the world. Somehow, the beauty of the pearl grows when it's been retrieved from the depth of the ocean.
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Buying Pearl Jewelry Without Being Ripped Off

Buying pearl jewelry can be fun, exciting and confusing. Whether you're considering a gift of pearl jewelry for someone special or as a treat for yourself, take some time to learn the terms used in the industry. Here's some information to help you get the best quality pearl jewelry for your money, whether you're shopping in a traditional brick and mortar store or online.

Pearls

Natural or real pearls are made by oysters and other mollusks. Cultured pearls also are grown by mollusks, but with human intervention; that is, an irritant introduced into the shells causes a pearl to grow. Imitation pearls are man-made with glass, plastic, or organic materials.

Because natural pearls are very rare, most pearls used in jewelry are either cultured or imitation pearls. Cultured pearls, because they are made by oysters or mollusks, usually are more expensive than imitation pears. A cultured pearl's value is largely based on its size, usually stated in millimeters, and the quality of its nacre coating, which give it luster. Jewelers should tell your if the pearls are cultured or imitation. Some black, bronze, gold, purple, blue and orange pearls, whether natural or cultured, occur that way in nature; some, however, are dyed through various processes. Jewelers should tell you whether the colored pearls are naturally colored, dyed or irradiated.

Clams, oysters, mussels and many other mollusks with limy shells are known to produce pearls. But very few kinds yield gem pearls of jeweler's quality. The pearl is an abnormal growth of mother-of-pearl, or nacre, imbedded in the soft bodies of these shellfish. It is built up, layer upon layer, in the same way as nacre is added to the lining of the growing shell and always has the same color and luster. For example, over the country, hundreds of good-sized pearls are found each year in the oysters we eat. Unfortunately these have no commercial value regardless of whether they have been cooked or not because they are dull opaque white or purple like the shell of the parent oyster. In recent times almost all pearls of gem quality come from the oriental pearl oyster which has a bright shimmering translucent nacre.

A pearl starts growing when some irritating foreign substance such as a sand grain, bit of mud, parasite or other object becomes lodged in the shell-producing gland called the mantle. Pearls formed in the soft flesh where nacre can be added on all sides are most likely to be spherical and the most highly prized. By far the great majority are flattened or variously distorted and have little value. Size, color, luster and freedom from flaws are other essential qualities. Unlike other gems, such as diamonds, pearls have an average life of only about 50 years. In time the small amount of water in a pearl's make-up is lost and its surface cracks. Because they are mostly lime, necklaces which are worn often are injured by the acid secretions of the human skin.
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A BOBBY on the beat has been rewarded

A BOBBY on the beat has been rewarded for his dedication to one of pearl jewelry Liverpool's most deprived areas by being named Police Review's 2009 Community Police Officer of the Year.

PC Shaun Brady, of Merseyside Police, was named the biwa pearl winner at an awards ceremony on Wednesday night.

Other winners at Police Review's 18th annual awards were PC Marcus Forbes-George, of Gloucestershire Constabulary, who won Student Officer of the akoya pearl Year and Ellie Beaumont, of Staffordshire Police, who won Community Support Officer of the Year.

Gwynfor Lloyd, formerly a sergeant with South Wales Police, won the Lifetime Achievement Award, while officers from the Met firearms unit's Operation Make Peace took home the Diversity in Action Award.

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Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani

The former president of Iran, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, envisioned Iran's Free and Special Economic Zones (F and SEZ) as a means of increasing the country's links to the world economy. However, the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) has used the pearl jewelry zones to restrict the movement of goods, build relationships with ideologically sympathetic regimes, and distribute patronage to  regime stalwarts.

While 'mis-used' relative to biwa pearl their original purpose, and underperforming their potential, the free zones may yet prove a Trojan Horse of sorts for the Islamic Republic, to the extent they promote increased trade, motivate spending on internal infrastructure, and serve as rallying points for akoya pearl those who favour economic decentralisation.
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A team of United States diplomats

A team of United States diplomats brokered the deal with support from the Organisation of American States (OAS). It paves the way for the reinstatement of President Manuel Zelaya, who was ousted in a military-backed constitutional coup on 28 June and is pearl jewelry currently taking refuge in the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa.

Exact details of the accord were not biwa pearl immediately released, but it seemed de facto president Roberto Micheletti had agreed to allow the question of Zelaya's return to be placed before a vote in Congress, subject to a prior but non-binding opinion from the Supreme Court. A temporary power-sharing government would also be created, with both sides committed to respecting the akoya pearl results of scheduled 29 November presidential elections.
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In early October, Viktor Ivanov

In early October, Viktor Ivanov, head of the Federal Narcotics Control Service (Federalnaya sluzhba narkokontrolya Rossii: FSNK), accused the pearl jewelry United States's counter-narcotic policy in Afghanistan of being "insufficient".

This represented an escalation of rhetoric from March, when Ivanov warned of an ongoing flow of Afghan narcotics through Russia, despite a 70 per cent rise in seizure rates. In a report he circulated at the time, he warned: "In recent years Russia has not just become massively hooked on Afghan opiates, it has also become the world's absolute leader in the biwa pearl opiate trade and the number one heroin consumer."

According to the Russian health ministry, the country has up to 2.5 million drug addicts out of a population of some 140 million, most aged between 18 and 39. However, other estimates place the akoya pearl figure higher and even Ivanov acknowledged in March that there are more than 5.1 million drug users in Russia, almost double the figures from 2002.
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