cultured pearl

noun
1.
a pearl induced to form by placement of a grain of sand or another irritating object within the shell of a pearl oyster or mussel.
Also, culture pearl.
Origin
1920-25
Examples from the web for cultured pearl
  • The shape of the nucleus and its position in the mussel determines the shape of the cultured pearl.
  • After a period of time, the cultured pearl is removed from the oyster and used in jewelry production.
  • The lining of the pearl sac contains epithelial cells that deposit layers of nacre around the nucleus, forming a cultured pearl.
  • Today, the cultured pearl industry is a multimillion dollar business.
  • The everlasting aim of the industry is to improve the quality of the cultured pearl.
British Dictionary definitions for cultured pearl

cultured pearl

noun
1.
a pearl induced to grow in the shell of an oyster or clam, by the insertion of a small object around which layers of nacre are deposited
Encyclopedia Article for cultured pearl

natural but cultivated pearl produced by a mollusk after the intentional introduction of a foreign object inside the creature's shell. The discovery that such pearls could be cultivated in freshwater mussels is said to have been made in 13th-century China, and the Chinese have been adept for hundreds of years at cultivating pearls by opening the mussel's shell and inserting into it small pellets of mud or tiny bosses of wood, bone, or metal and returning the mussel to its bed for about three years to await the maturation of a pearl formation. Cultured pearls of China have been almost exclusively blister pearls (hemispherical pearls formed between the mussel and its shell), which require addition of a half sphere of mother-of-pearl to create the assembled gem, called a pearl doublet.

Learn more about cultured pearl with a free trial on Britannica.com