Order Status Login Customer Service Help Shopping Cart home Customer Service

<MMString:LoadString id="insertbar/table" />
Home Rings Earrings Necklaces & Pendants Bracelets Tiffany Style Jewelry Engraved Jewelry
Sterling Sivler Jewelry
Chat Button

BONUS-ITEMS
Birthstone Jewelry
Disney Jewelry
Crystals
Movie Jewelry
Clearance Sale
Latest Trends
Personalized Jewelry
Best Sellers
Memorial Day Sale
New Arrivals
Shop By Category
Rings
Earrings
Necklaces & Pendants
Bracelets
Oriana Beads fits Pandora
Anklets & Toe Rings
Men's Jewelry
Kid's Jewelry
Fashion Watches
Shop By Collection
Engravable Jewelry
Tiffany Style Jewelry
Designer Style Jewelry
Celebrity Jewelry
Bridal Jewelry
Bali Jewelry
Bohemian Jewelry
Cubic Zirconia Jewelry
Nature Jewelry
Pearl Jewelry
Religious Jewelry
Shop By Color
Shop By Material
Brooches & Pins
Toe Rings

Personalized Jewelry

Pearl Jewelry

Movie Jewelry

Clearance Sale







More Collections
Shop By Color
Gift Ideas

Sign Up For Our Free Catalog

Free Gift on Orders Over $150
Pandora Compatible Beads

Why buy from Eve?

 

Jewelry Terms

 

 

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Z

 

Zinc: An abundant, lustrous, bluish-white, metallic element of the magnesium-cadmium group. Zinc is brittle at room temperature but malleable when heated. It is used to form a wide variety of alloys including Brass, Britannia, Bronze, various solders, and Nickel Silver. Because zinc is not easily oxidized in moist air it is used for sheeting, coating galvanized iron (and other metals), for electric fuses, anodes, meter cases, in roofing, gutters, and is also largely consumed in electric batteries.

Zircon: A common mineral occurring in small crystals which is heated, cut, and polished to form a brilliant blue-white gem used as a refractory when opaque and as a gemstone when transparent.. They are not man made stones like cubic zirconia are. Although they are frequently color-treated, zircons occur naturally in clear, yellow, orange, brown and red. They are a chief source of zirconium. See Hyacinth.

Zoisite: Named after the man who discovered it, Von Zois, an Austrian mineralogist, Zoisite is opaque grayish or whitish mineral with green or black streaks occurring in rhombohedral crystals or columnar masses. It is a silicate of alumina and lime, similar to epidote, and is often found included with opaque ruby (corundum). Zoisite is found in Kenya, Norway, Austria, Western Australia, Italy, and North Carolina. There is a purple-blue variant of it discovered in Tanzania in 1967 called Tanzanite. Zoisite has a hardness of 6.5 on the Mohs scale.

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z