The Crystal Circle
Specimen: Standard Gallery: Standard
Quartz var. Faden
Quartz var. Faden
Dara Ismael Khan District, Waziristan, Pakistan
Corundum Var. Sapphire
Corundum Var. Sapphire
Balangoda, near Ratnapura, Sabaragamuwa Province, Sri Lanka
Garnet var. Hessonite
Garnet var. Hessonite
Jeffrey Mine, Asbestos, Quebec, Canada
Wulfenite
Wulfenite
Wulfenite from Villa Ahumada, Sierra de Los Lamentos, Chihuahua, Mexico
Opal (rough and cut)
Opal (rough and cut)
Shoa Province, Ethiopia
Dioptase
Dioptase
Altyn-Tyube, Karagandy Oblast, Kazakhstan
Moldavite

Moldavite

sold
Locality
Chlum, Moldau River valley, Czech Republic
Dimensions
4.3 x 4.2 x 1.0 cm
Size class
Thumbnail
SID
MOLDAVITE4

Moldavite is a green tektite. A tektite is an impact glass, created due to the impact of a meteorite with the earth's crust. It is believed that the meteorite that created the Ries Kessel (a massive 15 mile diameter crater), 120 miles away in Germany "splashed," hot material into the atmosphere that cooled as it fell back to Earth. This impact material, landed across a relatively small (10 to 15 square mile) area in the current Czech Republic. This impact event is dated around 15 million years ago. Moldavite miners must dig holes to access this old layer in which the Moldavite is found. Moldavite is typically quite small, with the largest pieces generally available, weighing between 30 to 50 grams (up to 6-7 cm long). Moldavite is valued for its size (larger pieces are much rarer), condition (lack of damage), an attractive green color, and how textured, or "spikey," the surface is. 

This piece has amazing texturing on its surface. It has a pleasant green color, and is relatively flat so for the weight (which loosely dictates price), you get a large surface area. 

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