Posts tagged amethyst
Crystals through Time

Crystals and precious stones are often used by people to heal trauma, treat ailments of mind and body, and protect them against negative energy. It seems to have been true for many years, even if it just became more popular recently. But who started this practice?

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The first recorded use of crystals was by the ancient Sumerians, one of the first civilizations, who used crystals in their magical healing formulas and for inlays in their finest artwork. Lapis Lazuli and Serpentine were a couple of their favorites.

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Egypt too is an ancient civilization with a rich history of using crystals for many purposes. Egyptians used them mainly for protection and good health, often in the form of jewelry. Quartz, Emerald, Lapis Lazuli, Carnelian, and Turquoise were some of the most popular stones. Egyptians of all classes, both male and female wore lots of jewelry. Amulets were often made to protect the wearer, in life and especially in death. Jewelry was usually made with a specific purpose such as protection of health, warding off evil spirits, and bringing good luck. Those who made the jewelry had to follow strict rules regarding the magical properties of certain colors, shapes and materials.

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Egyptians prized Lapis Lazuli more than gold. It was used in making heart scarabs, which were placed on the heart of the deceased in burial to protect the heart in death. It was also crushed and used as make-up, along with Malachite. Galena was ground up into the famous eyeshadow called kohl. Garnet was used to promote good health and for protection. Malachite was used to line the headdresses of pharaohs to help them rule wisely and promote inner visions. Carnelian was worn to purify the blood and relieve pain.

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Ancient Greeks were the ones who coined the actual word ‘crystal,’ from (krustallos) meaning “ice” or “rock crystal” because they believed that Quartz crystals were water that had become eternally frozen. They used Amethyst amulets to prevent drunkenness and hangovers and the word Amethyst means ‘not drunken.’ Hematite is associated with the Greek god of war, Aries, and soldiers would rub it all over themselves before battles to make themselves invulnerable. Sapphires, whose name comes from the Greek word ‘sapphirus’ meaning blue, were a favorite among the kings and priests of ancient Greece due to their association with purity and wisdom.

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In ancient China, Jade was valued so highly by the culture that they had their own written characters in the language. Some emperors were buried in jade armor, and even with jade horses. Jade symbolized moral integrity and purity. It was believed to have kidney-healing powers as well. Jade was carved into all types of objects, including jewelry, ornaments, ritual tools and even chimes. Jade was even used to seal the orifices of bodies for burial! Men were seen as virtuous for having Jade ornaments on their desk and in their homes.

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The Native Americans have always had a deep respect for crystals and their use in healing. Much of their history is lost now because traditions were passed on orally from generation to generation, and many of the languages have been lost over time as the native populations have been decimated by genocide. The Native Americans saw the crystals as powerful tools given by the Earth, which were to be used carefully, respectfully and only by those who knew how to use them properly. Turquoise was known as the stone of the sky - created by rainwater mixed with tears of joy that has sunk into the Earth. Many tribes used Turquoise in all types of ceremonies and rituals, to bring rain, for protection, and even as a currency.

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What we now call birthstones originated from the Book of Exodus. The Breastplate of Aaron was a sacred object worn by the High Priest of the Israelites in order to communicate with God. This breastplate had in it twelve different stones, “one for each of the names of the sons of Israel,” and they were arranged in a square worn across the chest. When the first academic research was carried out by a roman scholar, a list of the stones was compiled from his findings - the first list of “birthstones” was created. Before the 17th century, people wore the stone of each month during that month, rather than wearing their personal birthstone all year.

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Crystals and stones play many more roles throughout different religions. One issue with these ancient stones is that there was no accurate way to classify stones before the 1500s. Stones were named according to color a lot of the time and there is no sure way to know what many stones’ names meant when they come up in ancient texts. For example “Carbuncle” is the name for all red gems in the Bible, but could also refer to Coal. In the Koran, the 4th Heaven is made of ‘Carbuncle.’ The Hindu Vedas, the oldest and most sacred of Hindu texts, describe the powers and healing properties specific to different crystals and gemstones.

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The earliest known use of crystals dates back 30,000 years to the first amulets made of Baltic Amber - though there are no records to tell us how they were used at that time. Today crystals have become popular again as healing and spiritual tools but they also run our computers, keep our time, power our electronics and so much more. Crystals are part of your heritage, your everyday life, and they will bring us into the future too.

Crystals for Anxiety

What crystals can we use to help with Anxiety?

Let’s talk about Lithium.

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You’ve probably heard of Lithium at some point. It’s a type of drug used to treat Bipolar Disorder in people who haven’t responded to other medications. It’s also a Nirvana song and has been referenced in pop culture for decades in association with depression and mental illness. You’ve surely heard of Lithium batteries too, which have a high energy density and are often used in small items such as hearing aids, pacemakers, and car lock remotes. So what the heck is Lithium?

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Lithium is an element, a soft metal that is always found in other minerals. It was first discovered on the Swedish island Utö, by Jozé Bonifácio de Andralda e Silva, who was a Brazilian naturalist, in the 1790s. He discovered there the mineral Petalite, which gave off a bright red flare when put in fire. It was not until 1817 that a chemist discovered that Petalite contained a previously unknown element - Lithium. 

Lithium is always found within other minerals, like its first discovery in Petalite. It had many uses over the years - several that were highly unsuccessful- but starting in the 1870s it was used to treat mania and other “mood disorders,” though people understood very little about Lithium or mental illness at that time. Lithium is still used in modern psychiatric treatments today, especially for bipolar, depression and schizophrenia.

Lithium-bearing stones and crystals are great tools for anxiety as well. Let's take a look at some of the types that contain the element Lithium.

One of the most popular is Lepidolite. Lepidolite is usually purple, sometimes pink colored Mica that has Lithium in it. It is great for relieving stress and anxiety. Lepidolite comes from the Greek word lepidos, meaning 'scale,' because it balances emotions and looks like the scales of a dragon or beautiful fish. Lepidolite is used for calm sleep and dreams, and to dissolve any negative energy blocks you may have.

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Lithium Quartz, of course, is Quartz with Lithium inclusions. It often appears as soft pink or mauve colored clouds or phantoms inside clear Quartz crystals. Lithium Quartz is used to lift your vibration upward gently. It gives you tranquil clarity and makes you feel at peace, and ready to heal. It is good for lessening depression or the intensity of heartbreak.

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 Tourmaline often contains Lithium, and Lithium-rich Tourmalines can be be just about any color- including pink, blue, green, yellow, red et cetera. Tourmaline releases stress and worry. It can calm and smooth tumultuous emotions, and absorb fears to give you more confidence in yourself. It can aid you in finding positivity and sleeping more soundly. The different types can also have more specific purposes as well.

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Spodumene is a lithium aluminum silicate most often found in pegmatite veins. It has a high Lithium content (about 8%) and is the most important Lithium ore mineral, or source of Lithium for commercial uses like batteries, ceramics and medicine. The most popular type of Spodumene is the pink and purple variety, called Kunzite. Hiddenite is the name for green spodumene, and the clear or yellow ones are called Triphane. 

Kunzite is a high-vibration stone used to open the heart, to receive love and to connect the heart and mind. It is good for anxiety that is connected to relationships, especially romantic ones. It helps those who focus too much on the outside world become more self-searching and reflective. Kunzite is good at calming the nerves and clearing negativity.

Hiddenite is used for emotional and spiritual growth. Hiddenite is especially useful when healing from deeply traumatic events such as addiction, the loss of a loved one, abuse or even the loss of a home or job. It can stabilize mood swings and reduce stress and anxiety. 

Triphane is useful in feeling more positive in life. It helps you lift up out of darkness, gives you the energy to take steps in a new direction and reconnect with a sense of purpose. It makes the mind lighter so that you can enjoy life again. Triphane is also used to remove anxiety caused by past mistakes or failures.

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Petalite is another important Lithium ore and occurs as colorless, gray, white and yellow, sometimes even pink or green. Petalite is wonderful for calming the overactive mind, relieving stress and anxiety, helping with ADD and ADHD and countering anxiety attacks. Petalite is also called the stone of angels and can connect you with your spirit guide and the spirit world. It is very usefful in the facilitation of ancestral and family healing. It can help you balance emotions and energies, and think clearly.

Lithium bearing minerals are not the only stones that can help with anxiety. Amethyst is a very popular stone because it has so many metaphysical uses. It promotes healing, harmony and inner peace, balances mood and relieves stress. Amethyst calms the nerves and stills the mind. It is a favorite for enhancing meditation, protection and creativity.

Black Tourmaline, also known as Schorl, is the most powerful of protection stones and well known for deflecting negative energy. It is a very strong grounding stone as well so it is great for rituals and spiritual work. It can be used to calm panic attacks, especially ones caused by your environment. It is good for transformation of negative thoughts into positive energy.

Rose Quartz is a deeply calming stone connected to the heart. It is used to open and heal the heart, calm emotions and heal from emotional trauma. It can help those with insomnia caused by anxiety get into healthier sleeping patterns. Rose Quartz increases both self love and love for others.

Other stones that can be used to help with anxiety are Mangano Calcite, Sugilite, Fluorite, Blue Lace Agate, and Anhydrite (aka Angelite).

(Most of the images shown link to available crystals in my Etsy shop!)


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How Do Crystals Get Their Colors?

There are so many different crystals and gemstones that exist in nature, and collectively they have an incredibly vast range of colors all over the spectrum. Some types of gemstones can have several different colors, like Topaz, Quartz or Tourmaline. So how do they get their colors?

In their chemical structure, gemstones have trace amounts of different transition metals either as part of their chemical compound or as impurities. Transition metals are the metals that make up the large, middle part of the Periodic Table, and these metals are able to absorb colored light. Different wavelengths of visible light can be absorbed by different transition metals, leading to the different colors that we see. 

Purple Amethyst - colored by the irradiation of Iron ions in place of Silicon

Purple Amethyst - colored by the irradiation of Iron ions in place of Silicon

For example, the purple coloring of Quartz that we call Amethyst is caused by the irradiation of Iron ions in place of Silicon in some locations of the structure.

Garnet’s red coloring is caused by Iron ions replacing Magnesium ions, and the lovely blue variety of Beryl that we call Aquamarine is from the presence of Iron ions replacing Aluminum ones.

 

The yellow color of Citrine - another form of Quartz- is caused by Aluminum or Iron impurities.

In Emerald, Chromium ions replacing Aluminum creates green. In Ruby it creates red!

Topaz in it’s pure form is colorless, while atomic level imperfections cause the blue, yellow and brown varieties. 

 
Topaz in it’s pure form is colorless, while atomic level imperfections cause the blue, yellow and brown varieties.

Topaz in it’s pure form is colorless, while atomic level imperfections cause the blue, yellow and brown varieties.

Transition metals are not the only way that gemstones get their colors, however. In some stones, such as Sapphires, it is caused by the transfer of electrons between ions.

 Color can also be caused when an ion in a specific place is missing within the structure, or diffraction of light through the structure, like in an Opal.  

Simple inclusions of tiny minerals inside a larger solid crystal can change its color. For example if a clear crystal like Quartz or Apophyllite or Calcite has red Hematite in it, the color of the crystal itself can appear to be red.

These are the most common reasons for the colors of crystals, or at least their colors as they appear to the human eye. There are more reasons, for more complicated crystals such as Alexandrite, Labradorite and some Fluorites. Crystals are complicated and the more you learn, the more complex they become!

Epimorphs & Pseudomorphs

An Epimorph occurs when one mineral forms on another one, and then the first mineral is dissolved by acidic liquid or gas, leaving a cast of the original mineral in the latter one. 

Epimorph from Turkey of Quartz

Epimorph from Turkey of Quartz

Here is an epimorph from Turkey of Quartz (var. Smoky and Amethyst) that formed on another mineral - probably Calcite. Calcite is softer than Quartz, or lower on the Moh’s scale of hardness, therefore it is dissolved more easily. Because of this, the Quartz was able to remain intact while the Calcite was dissolved away, leaving this beautiful cast on the bottom of this piece. 

In this epimorph from Colorado, the white Quartz has formed on scalenohedral (aka “dogtooth”) Calcite, and the Quartz was left intact as a perfect cast of the spiky, cone-like Calcite crystals.

In this epimorph from Colorado, the white Quartz has formed on scalenohedral (aka “dogtooth”) Calcite, and the Quartz was left intact as a perfect cast of the spiky, cone-like Calcite crystals.

A pseudomorph is when a mineral replaces something else, keeping the shape of the initial substance rather than its own. Petrified wood is a great example of a pseudomorph, in which the organic material of the wood has been gradually replaced by silica until the entire branch or log is stone, in the exact shape of the wood. It can even retain the grain of the wood and the bark that was on the tree.

Petrified Wood (Pseudomorph)

Petrified Wood (Pseudomorph)

Many fossils are pseudomorphs - Ammonites are another example, as the organic material of these creatures has been replaced over time by Silica, Calcite, Pyrite et cetera.

Many fossils are pseudomorphs - like this Ammonite

Many fossils are pseudomorphs - like this Ammonite

Another way that pseudomorphs occur is when one mineral replaces another mineral. Here is a pseudomorph from Pennsylvania of Goethite after Pyrite, or Goethite that has completely replaced Pyrite and kept the shape of the original mineral now that it is gone. The epimorphs that we first looked at are also considered pseudomorphs, they are called ‘incrustation pseudomorphs’ because they assumed their ship by encrusting the initial mineral rather than replacing it. 

Pseudomorph from Pennsylvania of Goethite

Pseudomorph from Pennsylvania of Goethite


As you can see, minerals can be sneaky, shape-shifting bastards. But don’t worry, it’s just one more reason to love them. They are complicated, interesting individuals and the more I learn the more I realize there is to learn about them! I love to share what I learn and I hope you enjoy it too.