Unusual Pearls
The Conch Natural Pearl - Treasure from the Caribbean

A conch natural pearl is one of the rarest pearls in the world. Its creation is due to a pure chance of nature. Every year, at the most, 2000 - 3000 conch pearls are fished from the flat waters around the coasts of Florida, the Bahamas, the Yucatan and the Antilles islands. Only 15 - 20% are suitable for making jewelry. All previous attempts at cultivating them have failed because the Strombus Gigas sea snail that produces this pearl is extremely sensitive. The complicated spiral form of the snail shell means that it is not possible to reach the pearl-forming part without endangering the life of the animal.
![]()
The Mysterious Orange Melo Pearl
Melo Melo pearls are extremely rare and come not from an oyster or mollusk but instead from the Melo Melo marine snail, which is found in the waters of the South Chine Sea and the Bay of Bengal. Like conch pearls, the Melo Melo gem is not actually a pearl because it contains no nacre. They can be extremely large and are generally very round. The colors range from tan to dark brown. Orange is the most desirable color.
Buy The Sunrise Pearl
One of the largest discovered is nearly the size of a golf ball! The pearl's colors range from tan to dark brown, with orange being the most desirable color. Also like the conch pearl, the color is believed to be subject to fading over time.
I was contacted by Mr. Chen.
I asked him "How Much?". Below is the response I received.
In response to your question, please be advised that the Melo Pearl is the biggest and roundest natural Melo Pearl in the world and it is impossible to find another one like this. That's because it will take several millions years to form a pearl in the Melo Melo. The Indian Volute, (another name for the Melo) is very rare to find a pearl in. Originally, the former Yugoslavian Prince-- the vice president -- Mr. Domitri Karageorge in Sotheby suggested not to sell it by auction and he offered about USD 5 million for it at Taiwan Sotheby about 3 years ago. Then, he offered about USD 7 million after he got back to USA from Taiwan. Nevertheless, the owner still didn't accept it. Anyway, it is very possible that the owner will accept if you bid a little more. How much would you offer for the No.1 natural Melo Pearl? As a middle man, I would do my best to achieve this as soon as possible.
If you would like to buy this pearl you can contact Ray Chen +886-910567954 or raychentw@hotmail.com
Although researchers are attempting to culture them, none have yet succeeded. All Melo Melo pearls are natural. Although these pearls have been collected in Asia for many years, they have only recently been introduced into the West. more
An interesting story
Did they once belong to Vietnam's royal family? Perhaps, but for Ben Zucker, a mystical "sleuth" of the gems trade, seeking the answer matters more than finding it. more
![]()
The Quahog Pearl

This lovely pearl
typically occurs in unusual shades of color from purple to lilac, and
it is created in the "quahog" clam that thrives in the Atlantic
ocean off the shores of Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
![]()
Clam craving led to find of rare quahog pearl
The deep-purple gem,
about the size of a pea, was found by a Portsmouth couple during the big
snowstorm earlier this month.
A Rhode Island family found a rare purple pearl in a clam
they bought from a restaurant. Barbara and Ted Krensavage and their son,
Michael, discuss it with Tracy Smith.


Barbara, Ted and Michael Krensave on The Early Show Tuesday (CBS/EARLY
SHOW)
video
Windows Media Player
![]()
|
Abalone
Abalone are a gentle sea snail, with a large central muscular foot with an amazingly colorful and lustrous shell. There are over one hundred different species of abalone throughout the worlds oceans. The native New Zealand species is called Paua. Paua or Haliotis iris are only found in the cool clear waters close to the New Zealand coastline; it is these creatures which possess the greatest range of colors and iridescence of any abalone shell. While not commercially viable, this site offers a unique insight into one of pearling's most unusual products. |
![]()
Cultivating Bead-Nucleated Freshwater Pearls
This article appeared after the last Hong Kong show so we went out to investigate.

Above are bead nucleated freshwater pearls, they look just like their tissue nucleated siblings but are quite rare.
It takes six to seven years to grow a tissue nucleated 11mm Freshwater Pearl and after waiting all that time there is a 60 percent chance the pearl will not be round,
the most valuable shape. That is why bead nucleated freshwater pearl cultivation experimentation draws such interest in the pearling community. Using a bead along with mantle tissue, as is done in all saltwater culturing process, has the prospect of reducing the time it takes to produce a large pearl by half or more. In theory it will produce rounder pearls.
So while we were in Asia we set off to find out the current status of bead nucleated freshwater pearls. What we found was that there was some product on the market. Mainland Chinese pearl farmers did have some product (see picture above) but not in commercial quantities yet. The product we saw was loose, not in strands, most was of poor quality baroque with tails like baroque Japanese Akoya or drop shape. Some was round, nice goods. There was general consensus that no one cultivating these pearls have made a profit. The technique is still in the developmental stage. There are problems still to be overcome, such as the fact that a juvenile mussel can accept 40 tissue implants but only 3-4 beads, reducing the output by a factor of 10. The other problem seems to be that the pearls are not as round as desired. All pearl cultivators are notoriously secretive, so any information is difficult at best, but the market does not lie--there is no flood on the market now. The freshwater cultivator has proven to be as innovative as anyone in pearling and I personally would not bet against them. China is aiming at increasing pearl cultivation, improving processing techniques and expanding sales. We will watch the developments closely.
![]()
Nucleated Freshwater Pearls

Nucleated freshwater cultured pearls that once existed in rumors were out in quantities for the world to see. They were not the round perfect spheres the pearl world expected but baroque pearls with tails. Unusual creatures but some were quite exceptional. more
![]()
Scallop pearls
The newest type of natural pearl available to collectors is the scallop pearl. It is found in a marine bivalve scallop that is native to the coast of Baja California, and is just beginning to be harvested. Highly variable in size and shape, they have mosaic-like patterns and cream to salmon or mauve colors with a semi-metallic to chatoyant sheen

Lion's Paw pearls are natural pearls from the scallop "Nodipecten subnodosus
".
They are calcareous concretions that are created by a bivalve organism whose
shell resembles a lion's paw, hence their native name Mano de Leon or "hand of
the lion".
Lion's Paw pearls are found off the coast of Baja California and until the year
2000 no one in the gem industry had ever seen a natural pearl from this scallop.
These natural pearls that are found within the organism are mostly symmetrical.
There are buttons, rounds, drops, and ovals and they are in sizes from seed to
40 carats.
Some of the shapes are baroque and quite interesting.
These pearls are byproducts of harvesting scallops in the wild and they are very
rare.
Lion's
Paw pearls range in colors from white to deep royal purple with varying shades
of oranges, pinks and plums.
They are non-nacreous pearls with a mosaic pattern with a flash effect similar
to the flame-like pattern on a conch (strombus gigas) and melo melo (melo
amphora) pearl.
However, unlike the conch and melo melo, which are univalves, the scallop is a
bivalve filter feeder much like an oyster.
The mosaic pattern that covers the entire surface of the pearls has a sheen-like
or metallic three-dimensional effect when viewed in light.
![]()

Certainly the rarest and most valuable botanical jewel is the legendary "coconut pearl" that occasionally forms inside a coconut (Cocos nucifera).
Like the pearls of oysters and giant clams, it is a shiny calcareous sphere. It is difficult to place a monetary value on a genuine coconut pearl, but the odds of finding one in a coconut are certainly less than one in a million. To put it another way, if you cracked open and thoroughly examined one coconut every 15 minutes during a normal eight hour work day, it would take roughly 80 years to go through a million coconuts!
![]()
Although all mammals can have pearls form on the roots of their teeth only elephants and hippopotami tend to form loose pearls rather than mabé-like outgrowths
Being made of dentine they do not have luster or orient and, of course, they are ivory beige in color. Like tridacna pearls, they tend to have a flame-like pattern The pattern looks somewhat like wet silk. The shapes are typically plump ovals like olives or buttonish squished rounds.

![]()
The Nine Pearls

![]()
Snorkeler finds rare Whelk Pearl

A Warren man snorkeling for whelk at the Bristol Narrows recently came back with more than he bargained for -- a pearl that could net him thousands of dollars.
Charles Flowers, 44, a flooring contractor by trade, was at the Narrows with a friend in late September when he decided to put on his snorkel, mask and fins and search for whelk near the channel. Whelk, often called conch, are common in area waters but are harvested not for pearls, but for their meat.
"I just wanted some dinner," he said. "I figured I would have a little conch salad."
![]()
Cave Pearls

Pearls are a
concentric concretion found in shallow cave pools. They can be spherical, as in
these photos, or cylindrical, elliptical, and even cubical (as in the additional
photos in the table below. They range in size from barely larger than a sand
grain up to golf-ball sized. In the tropics, large beds of them may be found.
Grutas de Canicas, a cave recently explored in Mexico, contained pearls
estimated in the millions.
Cave pearls form when water dripping into the pool loses carbon dioxide and
precipitates calcite. This precipitate usually forms around a nucleus of sand,
bones, or fragments of soda straws or rafts. The typical roundness is due to the
uniform growth of the pearl, not to any sort of rotation due to dripping. A
sphere allows the greatest amount of deposition for the smallest surface area
and is thus most likely, even if the nucleus is highly irregular. The dripping
causes vibrations in the pool which may prevent the pearls from cementing (with
calcite) to the pool floor, though many pearls are found cemented in. Sometimes
excess precipitate will form cups or nests around the pearls, like in the photo
on the top.