24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Gateway to Over 3,000 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions
Skip to navigation

News

Natural History Museum Opens Gem Encrusted Gallery, The Vault

By 24 Hour Museum Staff

27/11/2007

Image: photo of a woman holding a large cut stone in front of her face

A super sized piece of aquamarine coloured beryl. © Natural History Museum

Pink morganite beryl from Madagascar and an incredibly rare orange padparadscha sapphire from Sri Lanka are two of the wonderfully exotic, not to mention sparkly, exhibits in a new permanent gallery at the Natural History Museum (NHM) in London.

The Vault, opening on November 28 2007, is full of the precious things of nature, revealing some of our rarest and most valuable treasures including gems, crystals and metals from around the world - and meteorites from beyond it.

“Gemstones, meteorites and metals have been treasured since the beginning of human history,” says Alan Hart, Curator of Minerals at the NHM. “The Vault is a showcase of the most rare, scientifically unique and culturally historical examples from our national collection, together with some private loans. All of them are here because they are exceptional and tell a unique story. Now people can unlock the secrets and discover the truth about these masterpieces of nature here at The Vault.”

Image: a cut purple stone in a silver setting

Dare you touch the Heron-Allen amethyst? © Natural History Museum

Highlights of the dazzling collection include the Devonshire Emerald, the Star of South Africa, the Aurora Collection and Heron-Allen’s cursed amethyst.

The Devonshire Emerald is one of the world’s largest, originating in Colombia. Its name derives from the time when it was given as a gift to the sixth Duke of Devonshire by Pedro the First, Emperor of Brazil in 1831.

The Star of South Africa was cut from a 47.69-carat pear-shaped diamond discovered in South Africa in 1869. It began a craze for diamond digging in the Orange and Vaal Rivers.

The Aurora Collection consists of 296 naturally coloured diamonds, known as ‘fancy’ diamonds. They are very rare – only one in 10,000 gem-quality diamonds has a natural hue, from emerald green to lavender blue.

Image: a large chunk of gold in crystal shapes

The Latrobe gold nugget. © Natural History Museum

The cursed amethyst, known as the purple sapphire, was looted during the Indian mutiny of 1855 and brought to England. The officer of the Bengal cavalry who brought it mysteriously lost his health and money, and his bad luck passed on to his son when he inherited it. He passed it on to a friend, but it promptly came back to him after the friend committed suicide!

Edward Heron-Allen, a researcher at the Natural History Museum in the early 20th century, received the stone in 1890, going on to – of course – suffer much misfortune. He threw it in the Regent’s Canal, hoping to never see it again, but a dredger recovered it and sold it to a dealer – who returned it to Heron-Allen.

He deposited it in a bank, wrapped up in seven boxes, with instructions that it shouldn’t be brought out until after his death. His daughter donated it to the NHM, along with her father’s letter warning people not to handle it.

Other beauties on show – without the grisly history – include the Latrobe nugget of crystalised gold, alexandrite which changes colour under different lights, and Martian nakhla.

Natural History Museum, London
The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London, SW7 5BD, England

T: 020 7942 5000
Open: 10.00-17.50 daily Last admission is 17.30
Closed: Closed on 24, 25 and 26 December ONLY

Related Articles

New Darwin Centre Set To Welcome 2,500 Visitors Per Day
Natural Selection Given Birthday Display At The Natural History Museum
Could Natural History Museum Meteorite Reveal Secrets Of Universe?
London's Exhibition Road Gears Up For Musical Extravaganza
Emerging Artist Tania Kovats Wins Darwin200 Canopy Commission
Darwin200 Celebration Plans Revealed At Natural History Museum
News In Brief - Week Ending May 25 2008

E-news registration
E-mail story to a friend
Tell us what you think

Anson Engine Museum Displays The Award Winning JCB Dieselmax

News In Brief - Museums, Galleries And Heritage News

Mountain Rescue Gear Moves Star Mummy To Leeds' New Museum

Holocaust Survivors Help Imperial War Museum Launch New Holocaust Art Exhibition

Museums Libraries And Archives Get Cultural Olympiad Off To Flyer

Volunteers Looking For Stone Circle Uncover Roman Fort In Cumbria

New Darwin Centre Set To Welcome 2,500 Visitors Per Day

County Durham Launches Peace And Tranquility Week

Disability And Deaf Arts Get A Boost At 2008 DaDaFest International

3,500 Properties Open Doors To Public For Heritage Open Days 2008

British Library Acquires Dering Roll - A Who's Who Of Medieval Arms

The Rolling Stones Tongue And Lips Logo Acquired By The V&A

Nominations Open For Art Fund Prize For Museums And Galleries 2009

Belfast's Ulster Museum On Track For Dramatic New Rooftop Gallery

Brighton Art Gallery Stunned As US Artist Broken Crow Is Deported

Treasures Of National Media Museum To Be Posted On Flickr

Missing Brontë Letter Returns To The Brontë Museum In Haworth

Danish Artists Create Life-Size Walking House For Wysing Arts Centre Near Cambridge

Search this site

Advanced Search
Map Search

Home Page
News Page
Exhibition Page
What's On
Trails Page
Website of the Week
Letters Page
Welsh Home
Graphical Version

Skip to body

Copyright © 24 Hour Museum
Information published here was believed to be correct at the time it was prepared. Welsh language pages developed with CYMAL: Museums Archives and Libraries Wales, funded by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Skip to navigation
Go to top