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An extraordinary series of geological events was necessary to produce the Dresden Green, a breathtaking 41-carat green diamond now on display at the Dresden Historical Museum in Germany.
Diamonds such as the Dresden take on a green color only when their carbon crystals come into contact with radioactive particles present in volcano lava. The contact must be brief, or else a green skin forms around the diamond.

The presence of neutrons, beta and gamma rays also are required to uniformly distribute the hue throughout the diamond.
The Dresden Green, like the Hope, probably was mined in India.
Diamond merchant Marcus Moses brought the stone to London in 1726. Frederick Augustus II, King of Poland, bought the diamond at an Easter fair in 1741 for about $150,000. Around this period, it was made into a badge, which later was fashioned into an elaborate knot setting.
It changed hands and wound up in Germany, where it was placed on display in the Green Vault of the Dresden Palace.
The gem, along with the rest of the Green Vault’s contents, was hastily moved out of Dresden during World War II. When the war ended, a Russian group called the Soviet Trophies Commission moved the Green Vault treasures to Moscow.
After much negotiation the German riches, including the Dresden Green diamond, were returned to Dresden.