The Jack Hills of Western Australia are not a tourist destination. They are low, scrubby hills of ancient quartzite in the Narryer Gneiss Terrane, about 800 kilometres north of Perth. Geologists go there because they contain the oldest known material on earth: detrital zircon crystals preserved in the Jack Hills quartzite that have been dated by uranium-lead geochronology to 4.404 billion years, plus or minus a few million years. The earth formed approximately 4.54 billion years ago. The Jack Hills zircons crystallised approximately 140 million years after the earth's formation, in the first rocks of the Hadean eon, a time when the planet's surface was still being bombarded by asteroids and the crust was barely solidified. Those crystals survived weathering, transport by ancient rivers, deposition in sediment, lithification into quartzite, and 4.4 billion years of geological time to be found by a graduate student examining outcrop in 1983. Zircon is not merely a gem. It is one of geology's most important geochronological tools, and the oldest physical object of terrestrial origin known to science.
Critical distinction: natural zircon vs cubic zirconia Natural zircon is ZrSiO4 (zirconium silicate), a mineral formed in nature over geological time. Cubic zirconia (CZ) is ZrO2 (zirconium oxide), a synthetic material grown in laboratories beginning in the 1970s as a diamond simulant. They share only the element zirconium. Natural zircon is a legitimate gem with extraordinary optical properties, scientifically significant geochronological importance, and a market history predating cubic zirconia by centuries. Cubic zirconia is an affordable industrial product. The name similarity is an etymological coincidence that has been commercially damaging to natural zircon for decades. Sources: GIA Gem Reference Guide (2006), pp. 100-105; Wise, R.W., Secrets of the Gem Trade (2016), pp. 331-342.

Chemistry and exceptional optical properties

Natural zircon is a nesosilicate with the formula ZrSiO4, crystallising in the tetragonal system. Its optical properties are exceptional among gem minerals: a high refractive index (approximately 1.925-1.984 for "high zircon," the crystalline variety used as a gem), strong birefringence, and a dispersion value of 0.039, comparable to diamond (0.044) and significantly higher than sapphire (0.018) or emerald (0.014). This high dispersion produces the fire (spectral colour flashes) that makes fine colourless and blue zircon genuinely competitive with diamond as a visual experience (GIA Gem Reference Guide, 2006, pp. 100-101; Wise, 2016, pp. 331-334).

Physical properties: Mohs hardness 7.5; imperfect prismatic cleavage; specific gravity 4.7 for high zircon (notably heavy for its size). The high specific gravity means a 1-carat zircon is physically smaller than a 1-carat quartz or tourmaline, which affects the size-per-carat visual impression.

The oldest known mineral on earth

Zircon's resistance to chemical and physical weathering makes it the most durable common mineral on earth. It survives conditions that destroy almost all other minerals: it resists heat, acid, and physical abrasion. This durability is why Jack Hills zircons survived 4.4 billion years of geological history intact. It is also why zircon is geologically invaluable: zircon crystals incorporate uranium into their structure when they form (substituting for zirconium), and since zircon excludes lead when crystallising, any lead found in old zircon was produced by radioactive decay of the original uranium. This makes zircon the ideal mineral clock for uranium-lead radiometric dating, the technique that has established the ages of the earth's oldest rocks (GIA; Wise, 2016).

Blue zircon: Cambodia and heat treatment

The most commercially significant zircon variety is blue zircon from Cambodia (Ratanakiri province) and Myanmar. The brown to brownish-red zircon rough from these deposits is heat-treated at approximately 900-1000°C in an oxidising atmosphere to produce a vivid blue colour ranging from sky blue to vivid teal blue. The colour is stable to normal light and wear conditions. Cambodia (Ratanakiri) is the primary source and is specifically associated with the vivid sky blue to blue-green colour that defines the finest commercial blue zircon (GIA; Wise, 2016, pp. 334-338).

Fine blue zircon from Ratanakiri at 3-8 carats with vivid, saturated blue and eye-clean clarity commands USD 100-500 per carat, making it an accessible premium gem with genuine beauty. The strong dispersion and high refractive index give blue zircon a brilliance and fire that blue topaz (similar colour, lower RI) cannot match at equivalent size (GIA; Wise, 2016).

Zircon vs blue topaz: optical properties and commercial context Property Natural Blue Zircon Blue Topaz (treated) Refractive index 1.925-1.984 (high) 1.609-1.617 (lower) Dispersion (fire) 0.039 (near diamond 0.044) 0.014 (low) Colour origin Natural mineral; heat treated Irradiation treated colourless topaz Visual character Brilliant, fiery, deep blue Clean blue, less fire Commercial price (5ct fine) USD 100-500/ct USD 3-15/ct

Blue zircon vs blue topaz: optical properties and commercial context. Zircon's refractive index and dispersion give it significantly more brilliance and fire than blue topaz. Both are treated (zircon by heat, topaz by irradiation). Zircon commands 10-30 times higher per-carat price for equivalent quality. Source: GIA (2006); Wise (2016).

High zircon, low zircon, and the metamict structure

Zircon that contains significant uranium and thorium undergoes a process called metamictisation over geological time: the radioactive decay of these elements damages the crystal lattice, progressively converting the well-ordered tetragonal structure toward an amorphous glass-like state. "High zircon" retains a well-crystallised structure and has the high refractive index and specific gravity expected for the species. "Low zircon" has been significantly metamictised and has lower refractive index, lower specific gravity, and a duller optical character. Intermediate zircon occupies the middle range. Heat treatment of low zircon can partially restore crystallinity, which is why heat treatment is applied to brown metamict zircon to improve it (GIA Gem Reference Guide, 2006, pp. 100-103; Wise, 2016).

Sources

Cambodia (Ratanakiri province): primary source for blue and other treated zircon colours. Myanmar: fine blue, colourless, and other colours. Sri Lanka: alluvial deposits producing a wide range of colours including blue, brown, green, yellow, and colourless. Vietnam, Tanzania, and Madagascar: additional commercial sources. The oldest known zircon specimens are geological samples from Jack Hills, Australia, not commercial gem deposits (GIA; Wise, 2016).

Quality assessment

Zircon quality follows the standard coloured stone framework: colour saturation and tone (vivid medium-toned blue commands premiums for blue zircon), clarity (eye-clean expected; zircon is generally Type I), cut (the strong birefringence causes doubling of back facets visible through the table, making cut quality particularly important for zircon), and size. One specific zircon quality issue: the strong birefringence produces a "fuzzy" or soft appearance in the facet reflections when viewed through the table, as opposed to the sharp, crisp reflections of singly refractive gems like garnet and spinel. This is inherent to the species, not a defect, but it distinguishes zircon visually from single-refractive alternatives (GIA; Wise, 2016).

Frequently asked questions

Why has natural zircon been commercially undervalued?

The name confusion with cubic zirconia (CZ), the diamond simulant introduced commercially in the 1970s, has caused widespread consumer avoidance of natural zircon. When someone hears "zircon" in a jewellery context, they often assume it means the cheap CZ simulant, and decline to purchase. This confusion has suppressed demand for a genuinely excellent natural gem for decades. The industry has attempted to address this by emphasising "natural zircon" in marketing, but the name association persists. From a quality and value standpoint, natural blue zircon offers exceptional optical performance at very accessible prices.

Is zircon the same mineral as zirconia?

No. Zircon is ZrSiO4 (zirconium silicate), a natural mineral. Zirconia is ZrO2 (zirconium oxide), which in gem contexts almost always refers to cubic zirconia, the synthetic diamond simulant. They contain the element zirconium but have different chemistries, different crystal structures, and completely different properties. Natural zirconia as a mineral exists (baddeleyite), but is not a commercial gem material. The only gem-relevant zirconia is the synthetic cubic form.

Is zircon radioactive?

Zircon contains trace amounts of uranium and thorium, which are mildly radioactive. The amounts in gem-quality zircon are low enough that the radioactivity is not a health concern during normal jewellery wear. The radiation exposure from wearing a zircon ring is orders of magnitude less than the natural background radiation exposure from cosmic rays experienced on a transatlantic flight. No regulatory concern attaches to wearing natural zircon jewellery (GIA; AGTA; health physics references).

Sources cited in this article

  • GIA Gem Reference Guide. (2006). Gemological Institute of America. (pp. 100-105)
  • Wise, R.W. (2016). Secrets of the Gem Trade (2nd ed.). Brunswick House Press. (pp. 331-342)
  • GIA Colored Stone identification. gia.edu.