News

Advanced Search

Lab Creates Tech for Identifying Stolen Stones

Jun 2, 2019 10:40 AM   By Rapaport News
Comment Comment Email Email Print Print Facebook Facebook Twitter Twitter Share Share


RAPAPORT... GGTL Laboratories has developed technology that can match a stolen diamond to its identification report, even after it is recut to hide its origin.

Technicians use a range of analytical identification data found in the stone, similar to a fingerprint. The information, which is derived through spectral and imaging data, maps the internal features of a diamond. Those parameters are then stored in the Cullinan Diamond Report, a partnership between GGTL and Cullinan Diamonds owner, Mark Cullinan, the great-grandson of Sir Thomas Cullinan, owner of the Cullinan mine. Using the data, the lab can identify a diamond even if it has been physically altered, GGTL claims.

All other diamond-tracking methods that are currently on the market rely on factors such as weight, cut and dimensions, or the presence of some tagging substance, GGTL noted. “The method applied by GGTL Laboratories maps a stone’s defects via various imaging and spectroscopy methods, properties that cannot be modified without treating a diamond,” the lab said last week.

GGTL is issuing Cullinan Reports for high-quality white and colored diamonds, it noted. The full Cullinan Report contains complete grading information, including the 4Cs, in addition to the fingerprint, while the Short Cullinan Report offers only analytical and imaging data, to avoid contradicting the grades of an existing report from another laboratory, GGTL added.

Image: The Cullinan Diamond Report. (GGTL Laboratories)
Tags: Cullinan Diamond Report, Fingerprints’, GGTL, GGTL Laboratories, Lab Report, Mark Cullinan, Rapaport News
Similar Articles
Comments: (0)  Add comment Add Comment
Arrange Comments Last to First