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Village Squire, 1980-08, Page 24The romance of rocks Les Chapman holds a rough slab of rock, whose hidden beauty will be revealed by cutting and polishing. (Photo by Reynolds) At Libra Gems in Goderich you'll find stones from all over the world BY YVONNE REYNOLDS Moonstone, tigereye, citrine and sodalite. Opal, turquoise, aventurine and malachite. All these semi-precious stones and many others, in both their cut and polished form and in their original rough condition, are to be found at Libra Gems in Goderich. What began as a hobby for Les Chapman gradually evolved into a business. "In 1964 my wife and 1 were visiting a friend in Michigan", Mr. Chapman said, "and the man was a lapidary, cutting and polishing stones in an old school bus that he used as a workshop." His interest piqued, Mr. Chapman began looking more carefully at stones. Soon after returning home, he was walking his puppy in a nearby gravel pit when he found a petoskey stone, a form of petrified marine life. (He recognized it because he had brought one home, beautifully cut and polished, as a gift from his Michigan friend.) He also found his first agate in that same pit. That clinched it ....he was hooked on rocks. Les Chapman began bringing home stones from every beach, gravel pit, and new road cut "from here to Nova Scotia." He started cutting and polishing his stones in tumblers built from secondhand motors and old fruit juice cans lined with rubber. Holiday trips became scouting exped- itions, especially to the American midwest. Mrs. Chapman recalled one memorable PG. 22 VILLAGE SQUIRE/AUGUST 1980 trip when the car was loaded with rocks, including a huge chunk of petrified golden oak from the Snake River, Oregon. The couple could travel only in daytime, as the weight of the petrified wood in the trunk tipped up the front of the car, causing the headlights to light up the sky instead of the road ahead. Oregon is a favourite hunting ground. "If they ever took the gemstones out of Oregon, there would be no Oregon", Mr. Chapman smiled. Very high quality obsid- ian and carnelian agate are found in that state. Turquoise is abundant in Arizona and Nevada, and Wyoming is the only place in the world to obtain turitella, or petrified snails. This black stone contains myriad white half -circles, memorials to tiny creatures who lived millions of years ago when a large part of North America was covered with water. "We are sitting on a coral sea bed, with the newest part around here being at Ipperwash, and the oldest around Ottawa" Mr. Chapman explained. Gradually as the rock collection threat- ened to take over the whole house, Mrs. Chapman suggested that all stones be put in one place. No sooner said than done. The Chapman patio was enclosed, and Mr. Chapman can now step quickly and easily from his dining room into his shop. ALL OVER THE WORLD For the past eight years, Libra Gems has been buying and selling all over the world. India is the source of moonstone, good gem -cutting quartz, excellent agate, star sapphires, and the best garnets and iolites or water sapphires. That country also has rubies, sapphires, and emeralds (the most expensive of precious stones) but Mr. Chapman deals only in the semi-precious variety. All his opals originate in Australia. Jade mined in British Columbia can be purchased most cheaply in Taiwan. The Chinese through the centuries have per- fected the art of cutting and carving jade. South Africa is the sole source of tigereye, which now can only be purchased in its cut and polished form since that country halted export of the rough rock. Amethyst comes from South Africa, Zambia and Brazil. Mexico yields agates such as the delicately patterned Mexican lace, and malachite is from Zaire. Russia has good turquoise and opal, but exports very little of it, and the prices are high. Mr. Chapman has some advice about these two stones. Turquoise is the softest gemstone, and can be cut with a knife. When it is polished, the heat of the process leaves a protective microscopic melted layer on the surface. If that coating is penetrated, the porous stone underneath will, like chalk, soak up anything it contacts. Opal is also a delicate stone. Composed of seven to ten per cent water, it