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Topic: GemstonesPosted By: Shadowyzard
Subject: Gemstones
Date Posted: February 02 2021 at 10:18
I like crystals and stones a lot. For about 2 decades, I've been wearing bejeweled rings and pendants. You can see a black onyx ring that I'm wearing, in my avatar picture.
Here are some of my favourite stones and crystals:
Moonstone:
Labradorite:
Black Onyx:
Aquamarine:
Blue Agate:
Star Sapphire:
Amethyst:
Fire Opal:
Here is a ring of mine. Its stone is blue amberoid. Well, it is not technically a stone. Anyway...
Do you have interest in this stuff?
Replies: Posted By: BaldJean
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 10:59
emerald
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
Posted By: JD
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 11:13
BaldJean wrote:
emerald
^Gemini !
------------- Thank you for supporting independently produced music
Posted By: BaldFriede
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 14:21
Berg crystal:
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
Posted By: Shadowyzard
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 14:30
BaldJean wrote:
emerald
Emeralds and rubies are great, but I'm more of a blue guy as can be guessed from my favourite gemstones. If I happen to decide to save money for an expensive gem, I'd buy a blue diamond. But I really don't fancy such a thing. Blue topaz seems cooler to me.
And oh, here's a black opal. It is said to be rarer than diamonds.
Posted By: Shadowyzard
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 14:32
BaldFriede wrote:
Berg crystal:
Cool! Transparent translucency always wins in my book.
Posted By: BaldJean
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 14:54
Shadowyzard wrote:
BaldJean wrote:
emerald
Emeralds and rubies are great, but I'm more of a blue guy as can be guessed from my favourite gemstones. If I happen to decide to save money for an expensive gem, I'd buy a blue diamond. But I really don't fancy such a thing. Blue topaz seems cooler to me.
And oh, here's a black opal. It is said to be rarer than diamonds.
there is a bluish-green variant of the emerald too:
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
Posted By: Shadowyzard
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 14:56
^ This looks good. It is also like green(ish) aquamarine stones.
Posted By: rushfan4
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 15:00
Oohh!!! A thread about progressive rocks.
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Posted By: Shadowyzard
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 15:00
Posted By: Shadowyzard
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 15:14
Gemcutting is also an impressive craft. This is excellent in that regard!
Red Beryl
Posted By: JD
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 16:11
I thought this was a thread about The Righteous Gemstones.
------------- Thank you for supporting independently produced music
Posted By: Shadowyzard
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 16:29
There are also "colour changing" gemstones.
I have a ring with a (artificial) zultanite stone. The colour change is just the opposite of the one with genuine zultanite stones.
Here are its pictures:
Here, it is exposed to both daylight (almost evening) and artificial light:
And here's me wearing it and drinking beer as "The Lord of the Rings & Drinks".
Posted By: Shadowyzard
Date Posted: February 03 2021 at 17:12
These are my rings whose gemstones are among favourites (natural too).
Blue Agate: Handmade (unique)
Labradorite: I guess not unique except for its stone
Posted By: Shadowyzard
Date Posted: February 08 2021 at 11:56
Well, I'm quite knowledgeable about gemstones, but learning never ends. It is the first time I see a sapphire with a twelve-pointed star. Looks awesome to me!
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 09:09
The Empress of Uruguay : The largest Amethyst Geode in the world that stands
at 11 feet and weights 2.5 tons. It has
thousands of deep purple crystals that
formed in the geode 130 million years
ago. Crystal Caves Museum, Queensland,
Australia.
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 09:42
Shadowyzard wrote:
Well, I'm quite knowledgeable about gemstones, but learning never ends. It is the first time I see a sapphire with a twelve-pointed star. Looks awesome to me!
Star sapphires are quite interesting, for the way they make what would otherwise be a flaw, a highlight. The star in a star sapphire is simply an inclusion (usually titanium), which follows the underlying crystal structure (hence scattering out in six directions when looked at above). There is not really such a thing as a twelve pointed star sapphire, and what you’re actually seeing is two infusions that as the sapphire has continued to crystallise have been naturally superimposed. It’s not that uncommon for this to occur, but obviously far less common for the “needles” of the two inclusions to be so perfectly spaced. In fact, a lot of sapphires you see are technically star sapphires, but you simoly don’t see the star, because of the faceting. Just as you can hide many inclusions in diamonds by careful faceting, so you can hide inclusions in sapphires. The only way to show the inclusion is to cut the stone cabochon, rather than facet it. And obviously you only cabochon a stone where the inclusion will be aesthetically pleasing (and not all stars in sapphires are).
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 10:01
Today I learnt that I hadn't known what a star sapphire is. Lol. Just kidding, of course.
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 10:17
Archisorcerus wrote:
Today I learnt that I hadn't known what a star sapphire is. Lol. Just kidding, of course.
Well, obviously you would know what a star sapphire is. Or, at least, I certainly assumed you would. But there are probably many out there who know of them, but don’t realise what they are,
I used to work in a jewellers, and customers would come in and ask about star sapphires, believing them to be a completely different type of gemstone than a sapphire. Just as there were customers who don’t realise that there are different colours of sapphire. It’s weird, because they would know about different colours of diamond, but be surprised if we had a yellow or pink sapphire on display.
[EDIT] As you said yourself, learning never ends. It may have been the first time you had seen a twelve pointed star sapphire, and so it might likely be the first time anyone reading your post had, too. I was simply expressing my interest, and if someone learnt something, then that was cool. But it was hardly my intent.
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 10:26
For someone to learn/know, I only say "12-pointed star" for practical purposes. Good that, that someone informs others, but that person can do it in a different way; and it is kinda awkward that one doesn't even realise that.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 10:30
BTW, I'm Shadowyzard, for those who don't know. It was my previous account. Lest there would be confusion.
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 10:37
Kinds awkward that you haven’t realised I wasn’t trying to inform anyone, least of all you.
You are clearly knowledgable about gemstones. Even if you hadn’t outrightly stated that,mthe creation of this thread, and your posts within it, show this. Because I can see you are knowledgeable about gemstones, I assumed you know what a star sapphire is. Because I assume you know what a star sapphire is, I also assume you know that a 12 pointed star sapphire is actually two 6 pointed stars. I was not attempting to teach or inform you of anything, as that would be patronising and condescending. What I was trying to do was show that I had an interest, too, and also for other readers of this thread (who are not necessarily as likely to be as knowledgable as you), to perhaps inform them, or at least simply elaborate on your own post. Let’s not drag this interesting thread off topic, simply because you have an issue with me.
I look forward to seeing the next stone you post. (I had not noticed this thread existed, until today.)
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 10:41
Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 10:57
I like Sapphire & Steel, but prefer Sapphire, for obvious reasons.
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 11:06
This is not a great photo, because I am not great at taking photos of small things that puts them in their best light, but since we are talking sapphires, this is my wife’s Goodletite ring. Sapphire and ruby are the same stone (corundum), but with different hues. While sapphires and rubies are often found in the same geographic locarions, they generally form in different geologic locations. New Zealand is one of those rare places where the two forms of corundum can be found together in geography and geology. Both form, along with tourmaline, in fuchsite in a very small area of the West Coast of the South Island of New Zealand. This combination of gems in fuchsite has the name Goodletite, after the surname of the person who discovered it and brought it to the geology department of the Universiry of Otago,
Every example of goodletite looks quite different, making any jewellery that uses it very different from any other. The hues can very greatly, depending on which stone is more dominant in the fuchsite, and obviously there can be differences in saturation and tone, too. You can find goodletite jewellery where the stone is more pinkish, blueish, or greenish, for example.
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 13:23
Favourite songs with gemstones in the title:-
Jane Relf & Stairway - Aquamarine
Joan Baez - Diamonds and Rust
Shirley Bassey - Diamonds Are Forever
The Beatles - Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds
David Bowie - Diamond Dogs
Eric Clapton - Diamonds Made from Rain
Enya - Diamonds on the Water
Kiss - Black Diamond
Pink Floyd - Shine On You Crazy Diamond
Chris Rea - Diamonds
The Seekers - Emerald City
Fleetwood Mac - Emerald Eyes
Shirley Bassey - Goldfinger
Fleetwood Mac - Gold Dust Woman
Spandau Ballet - Gold
Neil Young - Silver & Gold
Neil Young - After the Goldrush
Neil Young - Heart of Gold
The Human League - You Remind Me of Gold
ELO - Train of Gold
Freda Payne - Band of Gold
Ian Boddy - Jade
Sade - Pearls
ZZ Top - Pearl Necklace
Glen Campbell - Rhinestone Cowboy
The Rolling Stones - Ruby Tuesday
John Martyn - Sapphire
Stevie Nicks - Bombay Sapphires
The B-52's - Topaz
Anything by Jade Warrior
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 13:28
^ Thanks Paul, I'll check some of them out; from amongst the ones I'm not familiar with.
Cristi mode on
Gold is not a gemstone.
Cristi mode off
Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 13:37
Archisorcerus wrote:
^ Thanks Paul, I'll check some of them out; from amongst the ones I'm not familiar with.
Cristi mode on
Gold is not a gemstone.
Cristi mode off
I was half-expecting Cristi to correct me again.
I would've had to leave out some great songs if I hadn't included "gold" in my list, and besides, a gold ring often includes a gemstone too.
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 13:43
Archisorcerus wrote:
^ Thanks Paul, I'll check some of them out; from amongst the ones I'm not familiar with.
Cristi mode on
Gold is not a gemstone.
Cristi mode off
Technically, neither are rhinestones.
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 13:44
Silver is a perfect gemstone!
Posted By: progaardvark
Date Posted: June 21 2022 at 16:52
I'm arranging a sit-down with a thimble and an estuary.
------------- ---------- i'm shopping for a new oil-cured sinus bag that's a happy bag of lettuce this car smells like cartilage nothing beats a good video about fractions
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 26 2022 at 11:34
Archisorcerus wrote:
The Empress of Uruguay : The largest Amethyst Geode in the world that stands
at 11 feet and weights 2.5 tons. It has
thousands of deep purple crystals that
formed in the geode 130 million years
ago. Crystal Caves Museum, Queensland,
Australia.
The world's largest Amethyst geode pair from Uruguay
Which means we always should be suspicious of what we see on the internet, unless they come from totally trustable sources.
Or,
This guy is just a sprite without wings.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 01:32
Mexican fire Opal,looks like a sunset captured in stone.
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 02:09
Archisorcerus wrote:
Archisorcerus wrote:
The Empress of Uruguay : The largest Amethyst Geode in the world that stands
at 11 feet and weights 2.5 tons. It has
thousands of deep purple crystals that
formed in the geode 130 million years
ago. Crystal Caves Museum, Queensland, Australia.
The world's largest Amethyst geode pair from Uruguay.
Which means we always should be suspicious of what we see on the internet, unless they come from totally trustable sources.
Or,
This guy is just a sprite without wings.
If the Guinness World Records site is to be believed, and they do have a reputation for checking and rechecking fairly vigorously before agreeing to include a record, then:
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: BaldJean
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 11:09
Shadowyzard wrote:
I like crystals and stones a lot. For about 2 decades, I've been wearing bejeweled rings and pendants. You can see a black onyx ring that I'm wearing, in my avatar picture.
Here are some of my favourite stones and crystals:
Aquamarine:
the aquamarines you showed don't have a good color. in the XXL- version of the German TV-show "Bares für Rares" ("Cash for Rarities") from June 22nd this year a top-quality aquamarine in the legendary "Santa Maria" color variation (which is considered to be the best) having 35 carats was sold for €21000
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 11:16
^ Yes, the onyx stones I put there are not "ideal" either.
Even I have a pendant with a higher quality aquamarine stone than those.
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 11:23
Actually, the stones posted by Ozgur could well be, and probably are, “Santa Maria” aquamarine. Given they have not been polished and faceted, it is difficult to tell what colour they might be as a “finished” gemstone. Also, Santa Maria aquamarine can still have quite a range of hue and tone, and can mean something different depending on how it is used. You need only Google image search for Santa Marine aquamarine, and I am sure you will see quite a variation in colour. All it really means is that blue is more predominant than green, so the stone will be noticeably more blue, and described as blue, rather than blue-green. But there are still plenty of tones and hues of blue that are not blue-green,
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 11:42
I preferred to put gemstones like "stones", though some of them are crystals.
As Jeanine pointed ouy, normally too light or too dark coloured aquamarines are generally cheaper. But who cares? I love light blue aquamarine stones!
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 11:56
It’s weird, because my favourite colour has always been blue, but when it comes to beryl, my favourite stone is not aquamarine but morganite. It’s something quite peculiar to beryl, too, I think, ecause I like blue sapphires, but don’t really like pink ones. And yet, I can’t deny I really quite like morganite, while not caring so much about aquamarine. 🤔🤷🏻♂️
Since we’re talking beryl, have you seen a trapiche emerald, Ozgur? I figure if you like star sapphires, you possibly like trapiche emeralds? I’ve seen plenty of star sapphires, but I’ve never seen a trapiche emerald. (Obviously they are considerably rarer than star sapphires, so quite possibly you’ve not either - but given your interest, maybe you have?)
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 12:02
^ Oh, OK. We are friends again Nick. Your obstinacy shattered my walls.
No, but I Googled those emeralds, quite an oddball of a gemstone, I must say.
And, this is another stunning blue gemstone:
Celestine
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 12:16
Archisorcerus wrote:
^ Oh, OK. We are friends again Nick. Your obstinacy shattered my walls.
No, but I Googled those emeralds, quite an oddball of a gemstone, I must say.
And, this is another stunning blue gemstone:
Celestine
Wow! That’s gorgeous! I have never seen any celestine, before. Well, at least, not as a stone. I would guess I’ve seen rather a lot of it over the years as fireworks, though! 😄
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 12:29
^ It is more commonly known as celestite.
But hey, this is CELESTINE (you get what I mean):
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 13:05
Archisorcerus wrote:
^ It is more commonly known as celestite.
Possibly. I would have to take your word on that, but I don’t disbelieve you. I know it as celestine, but that is possibly because I worked at a jewellers, and celestine is a “nicer” name.
I had never heard it called celestite before, so perhaps it is a geographical thing as to which name people call it by. Similar, I guess to aluminium and aluminum (which I just had a bloody hard time typing, as it kept being auto-corrected).
It’s very pretty, regardless.
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 13:11
I've just stumbled across this one on Facebook. Agate, I guess. They called it "banana cream". It is from Turkey. Hmm, another kind of "Turkish delight" that looks delicious, indeed.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 27 2022 at 13:27
Rainbow obsidian
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 28 2022 at 03:29
Agate again... This time from Texas. Cool!
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 28 2022 at 03:33
I like both this agate and the “banana cream” you posted earlier. Agate is just cool.
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 28 2022 at 03:54
^ Glad that you liked them!
And oh, larimar is more "aquamarine" than aquamarine.
Posted By: nick_h_nz
Date Posted: June 28 2022 at 04:05
Blue pectolite is absolutely the most beautiful of the colours it can be found in, and absolutely looks more “aquarmarine” than aquamarine. In the UK, you’re more likely to come across pectolite that is pink, as Scotland is “well known” for its pink pectolite - but it’s nothing on the colouration of larimar.
------------- https://tinyurl.com/nickhnz-tpa" rel="nofollow - Reviewer for The Progressive Aspect
Posted By: BaldJean
Date Posted: June 28 2022 at 04:07
nick_h_nz wrote:
Actually, the stones posted by Ozgur could well be, and probably are, “Santa Maria” aquamarine. Given they have not been polished and faceted, it is difficult to tell what colour they might be as a “finished” gemstone. Also, Santa Maria aquamarine can still have quite a range of hue and tone, and can mean something different depending on how it is used. You need only Google image search for Santa Marine aquamarine, and I am sure you will see quite a variation in colour. All it really means is that blue is more predominant than green, so the stone will be noticeably more blue, and described as blue, rather than blue-green. But there are still plenty of tones and hues of blue that are not blue-green,
according to Heide Rezepa-Zabel, who is a professional gemstone evaluator and the expert who evaluated this gem, this is not true. she said:
"Santa Maria is a color designation and a trade mark. this singular color (put into bold by me) was so rare that it was first discovered in the Santa Maria de Itabira mine in Menas Gerais in the 1920s. ... these stones were found over a period of about 25 years".
here an excerpt from this article describing the main characteristics of a Santa Maria gemstone:
The 4 Cs of the Santa Maria Aquamarine Gemstone
Most gemstones are assessed using the 4 Cs: color, clarity, cut, and
carat. Color is of utmost importance for colored gemstones like
aquamarine stones. Therefore, they are first categorized by the quality
and type of color that they display, such as a Santa Maria blue. Clarity
refers to the imperfections or the lack thereof, within a stone. For
colorless stones it is ideal to be as clear and void of inclusions as
possible. While it is still of great significance to showcase impressive
clarity, color gemstones, particularly beryl, generally possess some
sort of imperfection. Having said that, Santa Maria aquamarine gemstones
are known for being ‘eye clean,’ meaning, inclusions cannot be detected
by the unaided eye. In terms of cut, aquamarine stones need to be cut
with sharp angles and symmetric patterns because of their reflective
nature. This is why stones with a high clarity can still appear dull if
they have a poor cut. Lastly, it is difficult to find a Santa Maria
aquamarine in large carat sizes. Half a carat is about the largest size
for an average stone. However, LEIBISH is fortunate enough to possess a
1.23-carat Santa Maria oval-shaped aquamarine gemstone.
this article mentions that aquamarines of this color are now called "Santa Maria" regardless of their origin; Heide Rezepa-Zabel mentioned this too. but from the way the socket was crafted she could date it into the 1920s and was extremely certain that this gem is really from the original Santa Maria mine. I uploaded her expertise; the video is of course in German.
the expertise stated that this gemstone was top in all 4 regards: color, clarity, cut and carat.
of course there are offerings of so-called Santa Maria aquamarines in the internet, but only very few of those are real ones
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 29 2022 at 01:52
Wood replacement/fossilised wood Boulder Opal with a beautiful cathedral patterned formation Queensland, Australia.
Photo Copyright Signature Opal
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: June 30 2022 at 12:07
This was the 2nd agate from Turkey I've seen in the last couple of days out of the 3 in total; and no, I'm not following Turkish sources for that on Facebook. This was bought by an American. Lovely.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 03 2022 at 15:55
https://www.geologyin.com/2018/07/rare-baby-snake-fossil-found-in-amber.html" rel="nofollow - Rare Baby Snake Fossil Found in Amber From Age of Dinosaurs
Scientists working in Myanmar have uncovered a nearly 100-million-year-old baby snake encased in amber. Dating back to the Late Cretaceous, it’s the oldest known baby snake in the fossil record, and the first snake known to have lived in a forested environment.
Source: https://www.geologyin.com/2018/07/rare-baby-snake-fossil-found-in-amber.html" rel="nofollow - https://www.geologyin.com/2018/07/rare-baby-snake-fossil-found-in-amber.html
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 05 2022 at 11:08
Another "delicious" agate: the grape agate. This looks exceedingly edible, lol.
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 05 2022 at 16:10
Outstanding photography, Archisorcerus! As a kid, I loved geodes & gems. Someday...
Posted By: darksinger
Date Posted: July 05 2022 at 21:06
Just received a package of stones from an estate of a rock shop owner who closed his shop in the 1980's and kept his remaining inventory in his private collection since. a slab with some druzy, a lot of snake agate and a really nice geode.
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Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: July 06 2022 at 10:07
darksinger wrote:
Just received a package of stones from an estate of a rock shop owner who closed his shop in the 1980's and kept his remaining inventory in his private collection since. a slab with some druzy, a lot of snake agate and a really nice geode.
Posted By: Davesax1965
Date Posted: July 08 2022 at 07:53
Archisorcerus and I seem to be in the same Facebook group. ;-)
Many, many years ago, I used to organise rough diamond buying tours in South America. (Long story and not very pretty. ;-) ) The contacts I had over there also had a Paraiba Tourmaline mine.
I was once asked to sell a 30,000 carat parcel of this - they're incredible gemstones. The chance of offloading a huge parcel like that was precisely nil, even through the big gemstone buyers, and I did tell them but nope, not listening.
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Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 12 2022 at 06:29
Blue, blue... well, blue again!
Linarite is probably the most intensive blue mineral of all. This fantastic fan of linarite is less than 2mm! From Dolea, Brusturi, Bihor, Romania.
Photo Copyright Fine mineral photography
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 12 2022 at 09:04
And again...
Stunning Azurite rosette from Poteryaevskoe Mine, Western-Siberian Region, Russia.
Photo: Quebul Fine Minerals
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 13 2022 at 09:57
Green!
The Turtle. Rounded botryoids of satiny-lustered, dark forest-green malachite. Shilu Mine, Yangchun Co., Guangdong Prov., China.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 14 2022 at 10:45
https://www.geologyin.com/2022/03/110-million-year-old-lizard.html" rel="nofollow - 110-million-year-old Lizard Rhetinosaurus Found in Amber
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 15 2022 at 13:20
Polished Natural java moss agate from Indonesia
Beatiful landscape
Photo Copyright Rock in java
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 18 2022 at 03:32
A mammoth 568 carats “The Eternal Flame” is the largest and most significant black gem ever found. What makes it even rarer is its origin. The volcanic soils of coastal New South Wales, Australia are replete with bands of obsidian and quartz but only small finds of volcanic opal – nothing like the great inland fields of Lightning Ridge, Coober Pedy and Queensland.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 21 2022 at 06:19
Gemmy fluorite from China
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 22 2022 at 15:10
Olivenite crystals
Olivenite is a copper arsenate mineral and crystallizes in the monoclinic system. The piece shown in this photo has formed on Conichalcite. As the name suggests, it is of olive-green color, which varies in shade from yellow or brown, gray-green, grayish white or light green in transmitted light. More commonly, olivenite occurs as globular aggregates of acicular crystals, these fibrous forms often having a velvety luster; sometimes it is lamellar in structure, or soft and earthy.
Credit: Tóth László
Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: July 23 2022 at 02:24
Archisorcerus wrote:
Mexican fire Opal,looks like a sunset captured in stone.
this is stunning, but I'd like to see other pictures of it (with maybe less tricky lightning).
.
------------- let's just stay above the moral melee prefer the sink to the gutter keep our sand-castle virtues content to be a doer as well as a thinker, prefer lifting our pen rather than un-sheath our sword
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 23 2022 at 05:02
^ Fire opals look so under strong light exposure. I wouldn't call it a "trick". I figure this is under natural sunlight.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 26 2022 at 04:33
Beautiful amethyst crystal flowers, Uruguay.
Photo: Le Stage Minerals
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: July 30 2022 at 03:43
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: August 22 2022 at 00:34
Named the Castle
Ajoite included Quartz w/
Native
Cooper, Hématite, Epidode, Chlorite and Kaolinite.
From Limpopo Province,
Messina
In South Africa
Photo Copyright C /Dust77 ~ Cek
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: August 26 2022 at 01:29
Natural Rainbow Fluorite is just bands of different colours.
Photo EmbodiedGems
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: August 28 2022 at 02:00
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: September 03 2022 at 05:13
Natural Rhodochrosite's stalactite from Argentina (looks like a Watermelon)
Photo Copyright Lovingthyselfrocks
Lol, this looks like frozen blood orange.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: September 03 2022 at 11:25
Lol, this literally looks delicious!
Unique botryoidal fluorites packed together as a oval shape standing prominently on amethyst.
Madhya Pradesh, India
Photo: natures_goodz
Posted By: darksinger
Date Posted: September 03 2022 at 23:41
At the rock show at the NC State Fairgrounds and saw a stone I had seen before on a video stream-Wild Fire Opal. Not sure if it qualifies as a gemstone, but it was an accidental find in Utah and was created by a volcanic vent being so filled with deposits that it was completely blocked off. Did npot get a photo, but found a photo online.< id="idg-io-safe-browsing-enabled" ="" oninit="true">
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: September 15 2022 at 07:35
Aragonite sprays flower.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: September 20 2022 at 06:44
Natural layered agate. Each layer was formed at different times. Probably due to earthquakes in the region, the lines are crooked. That's why the horizon line is crooked. Turkish
Photo: menekse_bilal08
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: October 03 2022 at 05:04
Octahedral Purple/Blue fluorite crystals From Jiangxi De 'an
Photo: super_mineral_/IG
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: October 07 2022 at 08:33
Incredible acicular and radial blue Dumortierite crystals in water clean quartz.
Location : unique mine in the world Vaca Morte, Bahia, Brazil.
Official discovery 2014 GIA
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: October 12 2022 at 03:17
Beautiful blue Fluorite Crystals.
Photo Copyright Farooq Qaisar
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: October 21 2022 at 05:43
Shining Pyrite FeS₂ crystals from Huanzala, Peru
Photo Copyright Michigan Rocks & Minerals
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: October 26 2022 at 12:22
Iridescent colourful chalcopyrite
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: October 27 2022 at 04:16
Beautiful Apatite!
From: Portugal
Credits: Saphira Minerals
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: November 08 2022 at 11:25
Yellow Oregon fire opal rough,
Mined by Outlaw Rocks.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: November 12 2022 at 08:38
Amazing large tourmaline Slice! from Madagascar
Photo: Proper_gems /IG
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: November 13 2022 at 04:34
It's rare to see such gem quality tanzanite (zoisite) on graphite matrix, especially with turquoise blue apatite, and diopside From Simanjiro District, Manyara Region, Tanzania. 38x21x14mm
Posted By: Lewian
Date Posted: November 16 2022 at 09:54
Despite the lack of dialogue, this is actually a nice thread!
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: November 16 2022 at 12:22
Lewian wrote:
Despite the lack of dialogue, this is actually a nice thread!
Thank you!
Some images are gone, and IDK why/how!
Though, the worst thing is/was; I couldn't share perhaps the best "piece" I've ever seen. PA was unreachable when I came across it, and I inanely forgot to save the image. I hope I'll see it sometime again and put it here.
Anyway, thanks again.
Posted By: Archisorcerus
Date Posted: November 17 2022 at 14:14
I hope that Argentina will hit the bullseye in the https://www.fifa.com/tournaments/mens/worldcup/qatar2022" rel="nofollow -
Perfect rhodochrosite stalactite slice from Argentina