Stuff You Should Know - Pearls: Second Best Thing About Oysters
Episode Date: September 15, 2022Pearls are super cool. And humans figuring out how to make them is even cooler. Learn all about the most interesting gemstone today!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant and Jerry's
here. Kind of. I think she went to go open the door for a delivery person. Other than that,
this is Stuff You Should Know. Hey, let's hope it's not the Land Shark from the 1970s Saturday Night
Live fame. That's good stuff, man. Hey, you know what? We need to shout out a listener because
this was a genuine listener suggestion. We get lots of suggestions and sometimes we take them.
Yeah. I have one in the pipeline right now. Oh, yeah? Yeah. I'm just going to let it be
suspenseful until then. Okay. Whose idea was this? I'm trying to think of which one it might be for
you because I know what's in your pipeline, buddy. Okay. We already did the anima's one.
I can peek through that scary hole. This is Jamie Buher. Nice name. I didn't even let Jamie know,
so hopefully Jamie hears this and it'll just be a big surprise. I know there's a certain listener
out there who is hoping this would be possums, but here's a little hint. If you suggest something
too much, it becomes a game where we will never do it. Well, you can ask the guy who continuously
asked for the Hawaiian overthrow episode. We kind of did that, didn't we? We did do it,
and it's one of the things that you want really bad, and then when you get it,
you regret ever having asked for it. Yeah. Just too much buildup. Right.
You just got to let things come as they come. Exactly. Chill out. Look in your pipeline.
I predict that we normally would have gotten to possums by 2027 easily.
Maybe. Never now. Never. Right. Now we want. But today we're talking about pearls, right?
Yeah, pearls, and big thanks to Jamie Buher because this is one, I'm surprised we hadn't
done it. It's very stuff you should know-y, just sort of sitting out there at the bottom of the ocean
waiting for us to discover it like a pearl diver, which weirdly was not even in this article.
No, I thought it was weird too. I did a little research on it, so we'll hit that in a minute,
but yeah, same. I read that Steinbeck book. What was it called? The Pearl Diver's Daughter?
That was the original title, but he just shortened it, and he just said,
what's this called? The Pearl. Oh, okay. I didn't know that was a Steinbeck book.
I knew about Grapes of Wrath as I lay dying mainly because of that metal band.
Mm-hmm. Travels with Charlie? Yeah. Of Mice and Men. What's the Canary Row one?
Canary Row of Mice and Men. Okay. Of Mice and Men, man. Have you ever seen that with the one with
Gary Sinise and John Malkovich as Lenny? No. I saw the previous version when I was a kid that
I want to say it was the Quaid, the big boy Quaid. Oh, he'd be perfect for that.
Yeah. Randy, and I can't remember who Lenny was. I think I saw pieces of the Malkovich one.
Okay. I thought you meant Randy Quaid was Lenny. I can't imagine him as anybody else.
Maybe Curly, but no, I think Curly's kind of like a Casey Samosko-esque smaller dude. You know what
I mean? Wait, who did I say? Did I get it wrong? Who did I say Randy Quaid was?
You said you couldn't remember who Lenny was. I don't remember the other guy's name,
but Lenny's the one who gets old-yellered at the end. Right. I guess I should say spoiler alert,
right? Yeah, sure. But if you don't know what that is, he's a cousin Eddie. That's all you need to
know. So, Chuck, let's start talking about pearls at this point. What do you think?
I think let's do it. Pretty neat little gem. Yeah. You can make a really good argument,
and I've seen it made all over the internet, especially from pearl sellers' websites,
that pearls are far and away the oldest gem people have ever used to adorn themselves with.
I don't know if that's true, but it's possible because you have to mine gold. You have to stumble
upon it. With pearls, I could see people just diving for seafood and being like, what is this
thing? And oh, there's another one over here. And then all of a sudden, you've got these gems that
are coming out of the Persian Gulf and being a big deal. Yeah. And it was already weird enough
that people cracked an oyster open and said, maybe I should eat that disgusting looking blob.
I know that's kind of an age-old question. It's like, who ate the first oyster? But
when they saw a little pearl in there, I mean, first of all, the interior of any,
or not any, but of many mollusk shells can be beautifully iridescent and very attractive to
the eye. So, I could see why somebody might crack a mollusk open and just say, hey, this looks
interesting. I wonder if that piece of meat is, tastes good. Yeah. And it does, especially in a
nice buttery lemon white wine sauce. I think we should do oysters just separately at some point.
Okay. But I found a little pearl. Turns out it was a blister pearl, which means it was,
we'll get to this, but it means it's attached to the shell. But I found a little blister pearl
one time. And I can't remember if it was just dining in a restaurant or whether it was from
a shell when we were like clamming or something. But I thought pearls only came from oysters,
and that is not true. They can come from just about any mollusk. Right. But you do make a good
point. Any mollusk can make a pearl if you're very inclusive of what forms a pearl, because
they're formed through the same processes. The difference between a true pearl and a non-true
pearl, if you're going to be a purist, is the substance that it's made from. And even more
mind boggling than that, they're made from the same substance. It's just a different structural
arrangement of that same substance that produces a true pearl or a non-true pearl.
I think that was enough mystery. Let's get in. Okay. So one of the things that we need to know
about pearls, and one of the reasons why they've been, for thousands of years, they were like the
great signifier of wealth, is because they're exceedingly rare in nature. Just kind of globally,
you'll find a pearl in about one in 10,000 mollusks. That's not very many pearls hanging around out
there. So you can imagine that when a really nice pearl was found, it was very much treasured.
And every single pearl, no matter what kind of pearl it is, starts because the little mollusk
that forms the pearl is irritated. That's right. You've often heard, you know, a grain of sand
can turn into a pearl. That is true. It can be a little chunk of the shell. Most times,
it's a little parasite. And it's almost like an allergic reaction takes place inside the
mollusk in that they mount a defense by coating this foreign thing that gets in their shell,
because their shell is ideally sealed up pretty tight, and they like to keep it nice and clean.
But something gets in there, and they go, all right, something's in here, shouldn't be.
I'm going to coat this thing with a substance, and we'll get to what that is in a second.
And that substance basically just builds up, and eventually it makes a pearl. And it can be a
little blister pearl that's still attached, or ideally what you're going to get to is a perfectly
spherical, lovely little thing that could someday end up on a piece of jewelry.
Yeah. Now, we should say that one in 10,000 mollusks, if you get 10,000 mollusks together on
the beach, you would find a pearl in one of them. It would be even rarer than that to find a
perfectly spherical or even close to spherical pearl. Like those are really, really rare in nature,
right? But that stuff that makes that pearl, depending on what kind of moss it comes from,
if it's a true pearl, the stuff that they build up to kind of isolate that grain of sand or that
parasite or whatever, is called nacre. And nacre is this combination of a kind of calcium carbonate
called aragonite. And then another substance, kind of like an organic binder called concleolin.
And as different layers are put down, add a little bit of water slowly, but surely like the
layer kind of gets bigger and bigger and bigger, and a pearl forms around that. Again, you have to
remember this. This thing that we prize and value and think is one of the most beautiful things in
the world is a pearl's, like you said, an allergic reaction to an irritant. That's what it's doing.
It just so happens that we find them gorgeous and like to wear them on our foreheads.
That's a great place for a pearl. How'd you pronounce that second word?
Nacre? Oh, concleolin. Yeah, throwing that L in there. It's very easy to want to do.
Concleolin. I get the urge. Yeah, concleolin. And nacre, by the way, is spelled N-A-C-R-E.
Great word. For those of you who love it when I just randomly spell things.
And nacre, I talked about that beautiful iridescence. It's mother of pearl. That is nacre. So when you
look at the inside of a mollusk of a shellfish that has that wonderful sort of rainbowy iridescent
look, that is the nacre. And it's really super strong. And I believe it even, it's part of the
structural integrity of keeping the mollusks strong, right? Right, yeah. It's like that's
what we would consider like what our bones are made out of. That's what the mollusks,
hardness is made out of, I think. Yeah, exactly. At least the interior part. So then there's the
other non-true pearls. They're called non-nacreous pearls because they're not made with nacre.
They're made with a calciferous concretion, which again is made from calcium carbonate crystals,
but it's a different arrangement of calcium carbonate called calcite. And calcite is more
stable than aragonite, but it's more fragile and it's just not the same thing as a pearl.
Yeah, these are, the non-nacreous are sometimes pink or brown and they generally come from the
queen conch. We say conch, right? Or we say conch. Conch. That's what I always said, but I also heard
people say conch one time and I thought it was mispronouncing. No, they were, they were dead
wrong. Okay. And this conch mollusk, the queen conch is in the Caribbean, or is it Caribbean?
Because I heard someone say it once. It's the Caribbean. Yeah, you have to say it like you're
about to sing the Billy Ocean song. Yeah, queen. Yeah, but you can't say queen. You have to just
leave everybody hanging. Well, you've never noticed in that song. He goes, Caribbean queen conch
in the background. I do want to recommend this story that we're not going to get into here,
but Olivia, who helped us with this was kind enough to tease us with a story from 2021
about a Thai fisherman who found a mellow pearl, M-E-L-O, and that's one of the other kinds of
non-nacreous mollusk pearls. And it was worth about 300 grand. These things are really, really rare.
You can't make them in nature. So that's why they're rare and you can't make them by human hand,
I should say. So they're super rare and they're very fragile. And as a result, they're really
expensive. But there's a really good story about this Thai fisherman who found one worth a lot of
money and just go look it up on the internet and read about it. But it's pretty involved.
So like you said, the non-nacreous pearls are made by the mellow-mallow sea snail
or the queen conch mollusk. But the true pearls are typically made by saltwater oysters or
freshwater mussels. Like when you're thinking of a pearl pearl, it probably came from a mussel,
possibly from Ohio or Tennessee of all places. Yeah, the Tennessee River.
That was one of the most mind-blowing things I've ever heard. Or if it's saltwater oysters,
it might be on the northern coast of South America. It might be in the Baja,
the Gulf of California off the Baja in Mexico. Those are some really good spots for it too.
Or it could also be in places in Japan as we'll see too.
Yeah, and the Tennessee River and a couple of these other places are some of the only places
where people still dive for pearls. Because again, as you'll see, most pearls that we see today are
made by people, well, people and mollusks. Sure, in conjunction. Yeah. But we can talk just for
a little bit about pearl diving. That was how they used to find pearls. And if you think,
well, I get oysters, I live near the ocean and I get oysters just in my oyster trap
a few feet down, those are almost certainly not going to be making pearls. The pearl-bearing
mollusks are generally very, very, very deep. And these divers, it was kind of the,
I don't know if it was the reason people started free diving so deep, but people who were really
good at free diving so deep often became pearl divers in free diving or the people that eventually
they would get a mask, but they would, you just go down there with your lungs and swim super,
super, super deep. Yeah. And that's what the Steinbeck novel is about.
So, like I saw that a pearl diver might dive down to 120 feet, 150 feet. That's deep. Yeah,
that's like 50 meters if you're paying attention. That is extremely deep. That's actually beyond
like the recreational scuba divers limits. I think that's like 90 or 100 feet. So,
these people are free diving that deep. And yeah, they're having to hold their breath for many,
many minutes, but they're pretty good at it. And the reason why I think they have to dive so low
and the reason why you're not going to find a pearl in an oyster along the shoreline is because
the flow of water has to be below a certain speed or else the nacre is just not going to form
correctly or at all from what I can tell. So, they can be just sitting real still?
Yeah, exactly, for sure. Should we take a break?
Sure. We'll take a break and we'll come back and talk a little history because it turns out
people have liked pearls for a really long time.
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So Chuck, we're back and we're talking pearl history. And from what I could tell,
for about 4,000 years, the vast majority of pearls came from around the Persian Gulf,
the Red Sea, or the Gulf of Manar by Sri Lanka. And that was just the way it was. If you had a pearl
before about the 1920s or 30s, it was very likely that it came from one of those areas
in about the Middle East or Southeast Asia. Yeah. And they were, like you said, they were always
prized. Obviously, if you look at a pearl, anytime something really that beautiful comes from nature
that's that rare, it becomes a precious item. And from the very beginning, and I mean, you name it,
in most ancient places where you could get pearls, they were written about, they were prized and worn
by the nobility, maybe nobility, definitely kings and queens, maybe sometimes only kings and queens.
And not even like lower nobility, they were that rare. But they also kind of
hoarded them, like their stories of ancient queens having like hundreds and hundreds of pearls.
It's not like they just had like, oh, we found one and the rest other people can wear.
Yeah. I think the oldest pearl necklace that was found comes from about 2,400 years ago or 2,300
years ago in a place that was called Susa, which we now recognize as Iran. And it was in a princess's
sarcophagus. And it was a pearl necklace of 216 pearls. It's a lot of pearls. It is a lot of pearls,
especially considering, again, like just any normal pearl is found in one in 10,000 mollusks.
And this princess had 216 pearls. So she would have been what you would call fabulously wealthy
at the time. Native American cultures prized the pearl as well. As you'll see, if you can find them
in the Tennessee River, then you can, there are other places in the Midwest of the United States
where you can find pearls still today. So they love them and use them. I think Mother of Pearl
has always been used. The ancient Egyptians definitely used it as far as 4,200 BCE,
even though they got pearls much later. Yeah, apparently it wasn't until they were conquered
by the Persian Empire about the 6th century BCE that they finally got pearls, which does not
make sense to me, but, you know, them's the breaks history. This Cleopatra story is pretty
interesting. I think we talked about this in our Cleopatra episode. I'm pretty sure it sounds
awfully familiar. It did. As the legend goes, she bet Mark Antony that she could present the most
expensive dinner ever made. And he was like, all right, let's see what you got. I think there's
a catch and there was a catch because supposedly pearl earrings were crushed into powder and dissolved
into wine and she went game on. She famously went and then downed her pearl shot of vinegar.
Yeah. And supposedly he said, no, thank you. No, that's too opulent from war.
Yeah, I can't, I don't know if that would be bad for you or probably just benign.
Well, it depends because there's a lot of cultures over the years as we'll see that have
basically prized pearls for all sorts of medicinal values along the way, like everybody from the
Hindus to the Taoists to ancient Sanskrit medical texts like the Shakara, Samhita, all basically
said, hey, pearls are really good for everything from prolonging youth to curing weak eyes. It's
an elixir to restore strength. Like I think anytime there's something that is valuable
as a thing of beauty, they also just assume that it has some sort of
health properties as well and pearls were definitely in that realm.
I'm curious if there's anything to any of that, if there's been like modern studies on pearl dust.
Well, I know they put pearl dust in some skin creams too and it supposedly adds a youthful glow
to your skin, but that smacks to me of basically the same thing as Sanskrit medical texts saying
it restores strength and youthfulness. And you know that because you use it, right?
Maybe, it's still worth a try.
Once the Crusades got going in the medieval era, they started trading with Asia. All these pearls
were coming to Europe. And again, and once they made their way to Europe, they were basically
off limits. There are actually sumptuary laws that said you can't have them common people.
You can't have anything nice. That's what all these laws are about.
Yeah. Supposedly it was to really keep the class delineations in order, but also it's
supposedly to prevent the lower classes from engaging in wanton spending that they couldn't
afford, you know, in like a form of vice, like luxury basically. The thing is now we have credit
card. Right. Right. It's the opposite of a sumptuary law. The thing is apparently Scotland
has really nice pearls. And I saw in more than one place that the story goes that Caesar actually
invaded Britain because he was after UK pearls at the time, although it wasn't the UK. You know
what I'm saying. We still get those emails all the time. For sure. Like if you put a gun to
our head, we could come up with it, but just sometimes on the fly it's hard to remember. Well,
and sometimes when we say English or England, we're talking about England. I think the official,
right, right. But yeah, exactly. But I think the official thing is the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland. I think I can hear some people in Europe clapping right now.
Well, speaking of them, the colonizers, of course, once they started making their way
around the world and plundering everything, they obviously took wherever there were pearls,
they would take and harvest those pearls and send them back to Europe again. Whether it was
Panama or Mexico or places in South America, wherever they went and they had pearls,
they were right for the taken. And again, they went back to the court generally. Men wore
pearl earrings apparently in Henry's court. Elizabeth had thousands and thousands of pearls
that were, you know, hey, a pearl button looks much nicer than a real button or just a pearl
adornment. And so let's just use those instead of regular buttons. Yeah, one thing that I found
mind-blowing was that her gowns would have thousands of pearls sewn into them. And that when
you clean the gown, you had to take all the pearls off and then clean it and then sew all the pearls
back on too. Can you imagine? You know what? I bet if you told that story back then and Elizabeth
was in the room, she would say, really? They do that? Right, probably. And by the way, off with
your head. Right, for telling me that story. I don't like guilt. Man, that was a great Elizabeth,
the first impression. Thank you. So onward and upward, Chuck, because in the late, late 19th
century, in 1896 in particular, a guy named Gaston Vives became the first human being,
as far as we know, to set up a genuine large-scale commercial oyster farming operation with the
express purpose of producing as many pearls as possible. Pretty good idea in 1896. It is. And
what's the word I'm looking for? Where something happens in ratio form?
Okay, I know where you're going. How about this? Because pearls are so rare,
Vives said, I'm going to overcome this by just having gobs and gobs and gobs of oysters,
so that just I'll beat the odds. And in fact, he beat the odds big time because he was farming
oysters and harvesting anywhere between four to 14 pearls per 100 oysters. So he was having a
four to 14% yield of pearls. Pretty good, right? Well, I mean, way better than what we said to
begin with, which is one in 10,000. Right. So he was harvesting up to 14% of pearls,
or harvesting pearls from 14% of his oysters. The worldwide estimate would be harvesting
pearls from 0.0001% of oysters that you would find. Yeah. And I don't think we said this is in Mexico.
And of course, these are reports that this happened. And 14% is the very highest end.
It was four to 14. But let's say it's 4%. That's still a lot more. And the only thing that people
can reckon is that it was just a place where they had a lot more pearls, because that can happen.
Yeah, the conditions must have just been just perfect right there in the Gulf of Mexico.
So good for guests on Vives. But one really important thing to remember about Vives' operation
is he was farming them naturally. Again, he was overcoming the odds just by sheer numbers of
oysters he was raising. But he also figured out some really important stuff too, that the better
you take care of your oysters, the more you protect them from predators, the more you protect them
from disease, the more you scrub them free of barnacles several times a year, the likelier they
are to produce a really nice pearl. And so he established some techniques that I believe are
still kind of foundational in pearl culturing today. But he did not try to artificially implant
or get, I guess, jumpstart pearl creation in oysters. He was just letting it happen naturally.
So he wasn't technically culturing pearls. He was just farming oysters for their pearls.
Yeah, cultivating, right? I'd say culturing. No, I mean, he would have been cultivating.
Oh, sure, sure. Grooming, breeding, raising. Beating the odds.
If you want to talk about making pearls, culturing pearls, of course, you got to look
to ancient China. They're the first people that kind of started doing that. They put little
molds. This is very cool. They put little molds that had different things, but chiefly little
Buddha images into mussels, freshwater mussels, around 500 CE. And they would develop those
blister pearls that I talked about that I found one time that are attached to the interior of the
shell. And it would be in about the same shape. It's not like it produced a perfect little Buddha
blister pearl, but looked enough like it to where it was a pretty ingenious thing.
I think the blister pearls are called half pearls or hemispherical. They're not obviously
prized and the kind that you want to put on a necklace, but it kind of got the ball rolling
as far as knowing that we can culture pearls. Right. They would say it either looks like Buddha
or Abraham Lincoln, guaranteed. So a long time after that, people started really trying to
figure out how to intensively cultivate pearls or culture pearls. No, I'm confused, but there was
a guy named William Seville Kent who was English, believe it or not. And he was a marine biologist
working in Australia. And he said, you know, I really think this guest on Vives guy is on to
something. But I think he's missing the point. He's just kind of letting nature take its course,
beating the odds, you could say. And instead, Seville Kent wanted to kind of like hasten
nature, to kind of like increase his chances even further by trying to figure out how to make pearls
happen, unnaturally, I guess. And he never got any further than creating blister pearls,
which from what I can tell is the easiest pearl you could possibly make. And he died in 1908,
and he just never cracked that code. But shortly after that, in another part of the world in Japan,
there were some guys who've been working on this independently, and they did crack that code finally.
They did. And we should mention the reason that they wanted to speed up the pearlness of the world
was not only just to obviously make more money if they could control something like that, but
in Australia and in Japan, these mollusks were overfished at the time, which meant obviously
they were underperled. And so they kind of had like, there was a need created for pearls
that wasn't being met. So all of a sudden, they started saying, hey, we can, if we can make a
blister pearl, maybe we can carry this over and make regular real pearls. And in Japan, there's the
Okoya oyster. It's hard to say fast. And abalone, which is like a big, very expensive kind of seafood.
It's a sea snail. Oh, is it? And, huh? It is? Yeah, abalone? Yeah, I didn't know that. What do you
think it was? I thought it was more clam-like than snail-like. That was my guess. Well, it's called
a sea snail, but it looks like a clam. Oh, okay. There you go. It's one of those things. Sort of
like it. Oh, never mind. I'm not gonna say that. I want to know, you have to text it to me. Oh,
that's okay. Well, yeah, I'll text it to you. Okay. So these two things, the Okoya oyster and the
abalone in Japan and the waters around Japan had very nice natural pearls being produced.
Again, under-pearl because of overfishing. And in 1888, there was an oyster farmer
who figures very highly in the story name. And this gets a little confusing because a lot of
the names are similar. Really? But his name was Kokichi Mikimoto. And he started working with a
professor named Kachiki. Is that right? Kokichi. Kokichi Mitsukuri. And he was from Tokyo Imperial
University. And they started working together, trying to get a technique going for initially
growing these blistered pearls. And they were successful in that not only could they get that
going, but they could actually industrialize it and make it like a really ramp up the process and
get a lot of them going. Yeah, Mikimoto's aim for starting to cultivate pearls was because
he wanted to democratize pearls. He wanted anybody at the time to be able to wear a pearl necklace.
And that's why he said about trying to figure this out. And again, like you said, the best
they could come up with were blistered pearls. And they call them half pearls for a reason
because you have to break them off of the shell, the inner shell. And so you've ruined one side of
it. Whereas a true pearl will form inside the oyster and can just be kind of plucked out rather
easily. And it's a whole pearl that's not attached to the shell. So it seems like if you could make
a blistered pearl, you could make a true pearl. And it just was not that easy. And neither Mikimoto
nor Mitsukuri ever figured it out, really. It was actually a student of Mitsukuri's, a guy named
Tokichi Nishikawa, who actually came up with the way to create a genuine pearl through cultivation
practices. And the same process is essentially used today. Yeah, it's basically what they did
was they said, Hey, let's take what nature does. And that's like what we have to sit around and
wait every 10,000 molests to see happen. And let's just do it ourselves. Let's figure out a way to
speed it up and do it by hand. And they did, they would cut out that, you know, we talked about the
nacre, they would cut out the part of the oyster, which is the mantle that secretes that nacre,
they would artificially put in a little bit of shell instead of like a grain of sand, they would use,
I think they found that a little like a round cutting of that iridescent shell works best,
right? I think they found that muscle shells work best for some reason, but yeah, they would make
them round or spherical. Right. And then they would put that back into another oyster. I think of the
same variety. I don't think they'd mix and matched. And that would basically cause that process to
start. They would say something's in me that shouldn't be in me. And it would create a little
pearl sack and has that little seed in the middle. And it started just coating it with that substance.
Yeah. And so they would surgically implant shell pieces and like a piece of mantle from another
oyster, which is kind of Mengele-esque if you think about it. And they would use little tiny
modified dental tools to create this surgery. And it was really hard to do because you can't open
an oyster shell more than two to three centimeters, which is not much. Or else it's either going to
kill the oyster or it's going to upset it so much that it's going to reject this implanted
nucleus, the seed for the pearl. So it's really hard to do. And again, this is still the way that
they do this. And it turns out, strangely, there was an entirely other guy named Tatsui Misei.
He was a carpenter. And he was working on his own version of the exact same thing, apparently
independently at the same time in Japan. And he and Nishikawa went to go patent their methods,
found that the other one had applied for a patent for the exact same thing and came to an agreement,
which I think is really sweet. Because had it been like Thomas Edison or somebody,
there would have been like legal battles and murders of elephants and all that stuff.
These guys just came to an agreement to call this process the Misei Nishikawa method.
Right. Some people say that we talked about Seville Kent who died without having
perfected the non-blistered process. Some accounts do say that both of these people,
which is basically how they were working independently on the same process, got their
process from notes from Seville Kent. But I don't think that's been proven out. So
who knows? It's just part of the lore at this point.
Well, yeah. I mean, plus Seville Kent never cracked the blister pearl barrier.
Yeah. The old BBB? Right, yeah.
Or BBB? BBB.
The blister pearl barrier. Yeah, the BBB. So Mickey Modo, who just as a refresher,
was that original oyster farmer in 1888, was a really good promoter, really good marketer,
had a pretty good operation going. In fact, the company is still around today and they still
make pearl jewelry. But they would build these big pearl structures at displays, at expo shows,
and he would go around and talk to governments and say, hey,
this jewelry is like, I know we're making them by hand, but it's still a real pearl. Look at
these things. Yeah.
And sort of had to overcome the, these aren't true pearls argument.
Yeah, the diamondique challenge. Yeah.
But he did overcome it. The thing is, is they're just not as valuable, not because they're not
real pearls. They are real pearls that are made from the same stuff and everything. It's just that
humans have intervened and taken happenstance out of the process, right? The reason that they're
not as expensive is because there's so many of them. You can produce them so much more easily.
And so, Mickey Modo actually did what he set out to accomplish. He democratized pearls.
And now you can get a strand of pearl, like a pearl necklace for like a hundred bucks, if you
want. And they're beautiful, gorgeous pearls that if somebody came up and said, which one's the
natural pearl and which one's the cultivated pearl, you would not be able to tell.
No, not at all. They were brought over to America in at a really bad time just before the Great
Depression in 1928, but they hung around. And then after the Great Depression,
people started buying pearls and pearl necklaces. And another thing that happened was they started
making just straight up imitation pearls. And these look great too. And Jackie Kennedy's very
famous pearl necklace was not real. It was a gift from her mother. They were artificial pearls.
I think a lot of times the pearl necklaces that you see can be artificial. And they sell like
hotcakes too. Yeah, I looked it up. I could not find for certain what Jackie Kennedy's
pearls were made of. But the closest I saw was a guess at glass that they were made of glass,
everybody. Yeah, there's been apparently all kinds of things, glass, alabaster. And then they would
put everything from egg white to fish scales to snail slime to create that, you know, pearl has
a certain look. It's not just like a plastic one looks plastic for a reason, but a good artificial
pearl has a little magic to it as well. Yeah, opalescence. Do we take a break? I think so. All
right, we'll take our last break and we'll come back and finish up with what's going on today in
the world of pearls. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance
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I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was
born, it's been a part of my life. In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
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All right. We're in modern times now and things are still about the same. About 90% of the pearls,
like genuine pearls that you're going to get are cultured. It is, if you'd say I want a pearl
necklace and I want it to be only pearls found that are natural pearls, then you got a lot of
money laying around and you're pretty picky. Yeah. But you can thank Mikimoto for not having to have
to have a lot of money laying around or to be particularly picky. And there's a bunch of types
of cultured pearls. There's a Koya, South Sea, Tahitian and freshwater. And depending on the
type of mollusk that's used, it's going to produce different colored gems basically. Because I don't
know if we said or not, a pearl is considered a gem even though it's not like a mineral in the sense
that like a diamond is, but it still has a crystalline structure. So I guess it's considered a gem,
plus people just like to wear them on their foreheads, as I said. But if you want a black pearl,
you're going to have to go down to Tahiti and get one from the black lip oyster, which is just all
around cool. Yeah, they are cool. And they're not necessarily all black. They can be gray,
they can be brown, they can be black. But they'll also have like kind of iridescent hints of like
greens or purples, even pink I saw. Oh, pink pearls? Well, pink black pearls, which is mind-blowing.
If you're talking about just sort of the standard traditional classic pearl,
they are produced in Japan and China. And those are those original cultured Koya pearls still to
this day. And then I guess, you know, the freshwater pearls, those are the ones that come from the
Tennessee River, among other places. Freshwater mussels produce them. They are not as expensive.
They come in all kinds of shapes and sizes from lakes and ponds and I guess rivers if it's the
Tennessee River. Sure. And there are also little things called like rice pearls that look like
what you would think look like little grains of rice. They tried to perfect the process of
getting them less rice-like over the years and found that if they just switched the species of
mussel, then they could do that and it worked. Yes. And here's a little tip for you. If you want to
impress everyone at the country club, you obviously belong to. Next time you see somebody wearing pearls
that are not spherical, tell them you love their Baroque pearls because a Baroque pearl
is anything but a round shaped pearl. Yeah. If you look up Baroque pearl necklace,
it looks almost like a necklace of molars. Yeah, weirdly they do. And that's a natural looking
pearl. Again, a perfectly spherical, even close to perfectly spherical pearl is really rare in nature.
And so more often than not, you're going to see everything from like blobby, misshapen ones that,
like you said, look like molars, ones that are like teardrop shaped. There's a bunch of different
cool shapes that can be produced as natural pearls. And all of those are Baroque.
Right. It is still kind of a rare thing to cultivate successfully or to culture successfully
a pearl. They've gotten the process down pretty good, but it takes about 10 to 18 months and
about half of the oysters even survive that nucleation process like you were talking about
about. Because it's really just very, very precise and is very finicky. And of those half,
only about 5% will end up producing a high quality pearl. So when you're pearl
culturing, I was about to say farming, I guess it's farming in a way, you are making most of
your profit about 90% from those that 5% of the 50% end up becoming high quality pearls. And you
can still do some stuff with a non-high quality, but you're not going to get the big top dollar
prices. And again, that's just from culture pearls. Again, it just kind of reminds you how
really rare the really nice natural ones are. And you said that it takes 10 to 18 months.
I saw in some cases they'll give the pearl up to four years to develop. And while they're cultivating
or culturing the oysters, the pearls in the oysters, they will scrub the oysters three
times a year, protect them from predators and disease. These are like the most well-cared
for oysters, which is great. But again, they've had some other foreign objects surgically implanted
in them. And then when the pearl is taken out, I don't believe the oyster typically survives
that process, which if you really stop and think about it is pretty mean. It's actually a really
mean, torturous process. They're cared for while they're being raised. It's true, but they're killed
to get the pearl out of them. They're just basically a machine to produce a pearl is
how the pearl industry views oysters or other mollusks that produce pearls for it.
Well, hopefully they become dinner and then part of someone's driveway.
They definitely do not necessarily, no. And one of the, I think what Gaston Vives actually might
have come up with this technique if it's not older, but I think it's still in use in places.
They'll harvest the oysters when it's pearl harvesting time. And just to make the process
easier, they'll dump the oysters into huge piles, cover the piles so that things can't get to them,
like predators or like vultures or whatever, and let the oysters rot. And then the pearls are just
easier to retrieve after the fleshy part of the oyster is gone. Truly some of those dudes are
eating the oysters. Some of them are. And if you, how about this, Chuck? I've got a little,
a little fact for you that's going to keep you off of oysters forever.
You don't, if you're eating a raw oyster, you're not eating a dead oyster.
I know. Everyone does that.
It's a, oh really? I didn't realize that.
Really?
Yeah. No, I'd never really thought about it, but there's, they're probably dead,
but if they're dead, they're freshly dead. And they're so freshly dead, it's possible that
they're not actually dead yet. So you might be eating them live when you eat them raw.
I hadn't thought about that. It makes me sad.
Yeah. I think they, once you, I mean, you've shucked oysters before.
I have not. You know that process?
Really?
No, I have my oyster shucked for me.
Well, part of the shucking process involves cutting it loose from its shell,
where it's attached. And I think that's, that's that lifeline.
Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, hey, it's, it's a renewable resource, but
PETA obviously is going to say, no, making pearls is not something people do just because
you're, you're messing with an animal to get something from it.
Yeah.
So PETA is of course going to be against it.
Sure. And there is like a moral question about it is morally questionable,
but there are some real upsides to it. One is it gives another industry to,
to areas that might be subject to overfishing so that they don't have to overfish just to
make money. They can raise oysters as well for pearls.
The oysters definitely clean the water in the area that they filter out all sorts of impurities
and problems. So that actually does make the water cleaner. And as long as they're not messing
with like the coral reefs or the local ecosystems to, to create these farms,
they're doing it in a more sustainable manner. It actually is a fairly sustainable industry.
It's just again, mean to the oysters or other mollusks.
Are you off oysters now?
I don't know. You'll have to ask me when somebody presents me with a platter of them
and some crackers and, and a mignonette.
Mignonette, you got to order that stuff. You just randomly get presented with platters of
oysters. What kind of life are you living?
At the country club when I wear my string of molar pearls.
Should we go over kind of quickly a couple of these expensive famous pearls?
Yeah, definitely.
So, you know, if you want to talk about super expensive, super huge pearls,
there are a handful that, you know, sometimes they look like super large molars.
Sometimes they look like Libya described one as looking like a, a giant white brain.
They are, they're not very good looking. Yet they can be really expensive, just as
prized collectibles, I think. Right.
It's not like, I don't think they've discovered a process where they can take
a big, large brain looking oyster and break it down into, or a pearl and break it down into like
5,000 perfect little pearls, right?
No, not that I know of. No, it's more just like they prize it for its weirdness and
rarity. Yeah. Yeah.
There's a, I think the biggest one we could find is the 75 pound pearl of Puerto.
And the thing is, whenever one of these comes out, everybody's like, that's so expensive.
It's so valuable. That one was valued at $100 million.
And it was found by a fisherman who kept it under his bed for a decade in the Philippines.
Now, all of a sudden he's sitting on a $100 million pearl, or I should say sleeping over one.
But it's never been sold. So no one knows if it actually is worth that.
It's worth whatever somebody will pay for it basically.
Exactly. It's a very good point.
But there is one called La Peregrina, and it is arguably the most famous pearl in the world.
It's an egg shaped pearl. It's been fashioned into different necklaces and different jewelry.
It's appeared in portraits of queens, including I believe Elizabeth the first,
and then a bunch of Spanish queens over the years, because it was part of the Spanish crown jewels.
And then it finally made its way into a necklace that Richard Burton bought for Elizabeth Taylor
in 1969 very famously. So in that neat, imagine wearing a piece of jewelry
that you knew was in a portrait of a queen that was made hundreds, several hundred years ago.
And now you're wearing it too. That's just cool. That's one thing I like about stuff like this,
like a pearl is something that can make its way through time and history from person to person.
Yeah. And part of Hollywood history. I mean, one of the great off and on romances in Hollywood
history. Some people would prize it just for that from Richard Burton to Elizabeth Taylor's neck.
And I think we should also mention at least the people like, come on, I don't care about giant
molars and brain looking things. Guys, what is the biggest like pearl pearl? Like the biggest,
really round, natural looking pearl. And I think the biggest one they found is about,
and it's pretty big if you think about a near spherical pearl, about 0.7 inches.
Right. That's big. It's 33 carats. If you know anything about diamonds, imagine a 33 carat
diamond, but a pearl instead. And I think it sold for a million dollars in 2014, appropriately enough.
A million buckaroos. Yeah. You got anything else? I got nothing else. All right. Well,
Chuck's got nothing else. I've got nothing else. And since I just said that out loud,
that means it's time for listener mail. And I'm going to call this, which is usually your
trumpet howl. Would you like me to do it? Yeah, please. Oh, you went an octave higher.
Yeah. Very impressive. The Stuff You Should Know 5K is all set and ready for another year.
Yeah. If you're listening, you don't know what this is. The Stuff You Should Know army,
on the Facebook page, they get together, they plan out a 5K race slash walk. And it's just a
very fun community event that happens all over the world, I think. It's not like they all meet
together in Kansas, that Aaron Cooper's house and run from his driveway to the nearest grocery store,
which is at least 5K. They do this at the same time in the spirit of all being together.
And the dates are October 21st to October 31st. So it's a rolling race.
It is they took a vote online. And the title of the race this year is the 2022 SY 5K is ready.
Are you in commemoration of the 10-year anniversary of the Camry ad that ran?
It's probably still running for all I know. It definitely is on some episodes somewhere.
There is an event page. If you want to find out more, they're getting all the details
worked out still. But I wanted to drop this early. Just go to the Stuff You Should Know
army Facebook page. Do a little search for the 5K. They probably have something pinned.
There is a listener named Sarah Denny Whatmore who suggested a costume element if people are
into that. And they're working out the prizes and things. And it's all going. So if you're into
community and exercise and being a part of something cool, go check it out. And this,
of course, was an update from Aaron Miesel. Aaron Miesel. Aaron, I don't know which way
I've said it in the past, but I'm saying Miesel. Miesel, it's probably just Miesel. Aaron's great.
She's been around forever. She was a movie crusher too. And that was still a thing.
Yeah. And she's a longtime member of the Stuff You Should Know army and maybe even the chair of
the Stuff You Should Know 5K. I'm not sure. She's definitely up there. And if you want to be like
Aaron and let us know something awesome happening, we want to hear about it. You can send it to us
in an email to stuffpodcast.ihartradio.com. Stuff You Should Know is a production of
iHeartRadio. For more podcasts on my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app. Apple podcasts are
wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and
my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because
I'm here to help. And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through
life. Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology
is way more widespread than any of us want to believe. You can find in Major League Baseball,
international banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on
this subject, something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology
changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas
are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.