Showing posts with label natural pearls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label natural pearls. Show all posts

Friday, February 28, 2020

Story image for online jewellery from TechCrunch

Mejuri raises $23M Series B to serve women buying jewelry ...

TechCrunch-Apr. 25, 2019
Mejuri raises $23M Series B to serve women buying jewelry for themselves ... makes and sells jewelry directly to women primarily online in addition to two offline ...
Story image for online jewellery from Vogue.com
Vogue.com

The Best Fine Jewelry You Can Buy Online

New York Magazine-Feb. 7, 2020
In the past few years, a new crop of fine jewelry start-ups have popped up, shaking up an industry that can feel intimidating to outsiders, and demystifying the ...
Story image for online jewellery from Yahoo News

The heart of Pandora's woes stem from common problems in ...

Yahoo News-Feb. 19, 2019
But typical retail pressures like online competition or a drop in Chinese demand aren't being blamed for the global jeweller's sluggish sales. Instead, the problem ...
Story image for online jewellery from Business Insider UK

19 women share the 19 best pieces of jewelry they've ever ...

Business Insider UK-Sep. 13, 2019
... steeped in the search for the best of the online world, I asked eight women on the Insider Picks team to tell me the best jewelry pieces they ever bought online ...

Friday, October 28, 2016

Very little run-off or human interference

As the helicopter touches down at Willie Creek just outside Broome, the turquoise waters are doing their level best to subsume the mangroves. A few hours later, there will just be the occasional pool amongst muddy flats, with the waterline a long way out.

By the standards of north-western Australia, Willie Creek is relatively close to civilisation. It is a land of ferocious red dirt and rocks that have changed so little in millions of years that they still have discernible dinosaur footprints in them.

One thing that does change, however, is the gigantic tides. And these are very popular with one particular oyster – the Pinctada maxima. The huge fluctuations wash in and wash out a fabulous banquet of plankton to filter-feed on. And the Indian Ocean here is about as clean as seawater gets. The Kimberley region is barely inhabited, and it’s far too rugged for crop farming, so there’s very little run-off or human interference.

It is the Pinctada maxima that lures in many of the humans who do make it up this way. "Each oyster is valued at AUS$10,000 [Dh27,800] over its lifetime," says Willie Creek’s guide as she opens one up to demonstrate what goes on inside.

These oysters are not for eating – although the adductor muscle is regarded as an aphrodisiac in China and can sell for up to $650 (Dh1,835) a kilogram. Their true value comes from what can be grown inside – the biggest and most valuable pearls in the world.

http://www.thenational.ae/arts-life/ultratravel/chasing-south-sea-pearls-in-broome-australia