Sparkling Spirit Amethyst 'Finger' Specimen - 69mm, 100g

Sparkling Spirit Amethyst 'Finger' Specimen - 69mm, 100g

Regular price £22.99 Sale

Locality - Kwandbele, South Africa
Size – 69 x 44 x 47mm
Weight – 100g

This spirit amethyst specimen features gorgeous purple lavender and smoky grey colouration throughout glassy clear crystals and has a dazzling sparkling effect when turned in string lighting. It has unique conposition with bubbly, botryoidal 'finger' formations and has a sturdy, flat base, making this a fine display piece.


About Spirit Quartz


Spirit quartz - also known as 'fairy', 'cactus' and 'pineapple' quartz - is formed when a large quartz crystal is encrusted by a secondary overgrowth of smaller crystals, creating a beautiful sparkling druzy appearance, though the tips of the original larger crystal can usually be seen as they often remain uncovered. It is a very unique crystal formation that occurs exclusively in South Africa. Varieties include white, smoky, golden limonite or 'citrine', iridescent 'solar' and amethyst spirit quartz.

Quartz is the most common mineral found on the surface of the Earth, occurring in virtually every locality. Pure crystals are colourless, transparent and hard, though many are coloured by natural processes such as irradiation or by the presence of certain elements within them. These coloured varieties include the popular gemstones amethyst, purple quartz, and citrine, yellow quartz. Some quartz crystals have unique inclusions of minerals that have grown within them, such as golden rutile, tourmaline or chlorite, and others may show silvery reflective internal veils and bright rainbows. Whilst the majority of quartz is created from molten magma that has cooled and crystallized, much quartz also chemically precipitates from hot hydrothermal veins. Well-formed crystals deep within the Earth can reach colossal sizes, with some measuring several meters in length and weighing hundreds of kilograms. The largest documented single crystal of quartz was found near Itapore, Brazil, measuring 6.1 metres at its widest point and weighing in over 44,000 kilograms!