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crystals,
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Smoky
Quartz

Smoky Quartz from Galileia Minas Gerais,
Brazil
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Smoky Quartz Elestial from Brazil
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Scientific:
Smoky quartz, the black
or brown variety of quartz is named after
it's smoky color. The name 'quartz' as I
have said before, comes from the Slavic word
for 'hard'. Smoky quartz is a popular
variety of quartz. It has an unusual color
for a gemstone and is easily recognized and
is well known by the general public. Only a
few other brown or black minerals are ever
cut for gemstones such as the smoky topaz,
the very rare black beryl or the brown
corundum. |

Elestial Smoky Quartz
Location: Barra do Salinas, Minas Gerais
Brazil
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Smoky Quartz photo courtesy of a private
collector
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Smoky
quartz has a few varieties of its own:
Cairngorm is a variety that comes from the
Cairngorm Mountains in Scotland. They tend
to be yellow-brown and gray-brown.
Morion is a very dark black opaque variety
of smoky quartz. (Morion is also the name of
a type of helm used in the 16th and 17th
centuries.) 'Morion' may come from the Greek
word for baneful or hideous.
Coon tail quartz is a smoky quartz with an
alternating black and gray banding.
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Smoky quartz, barite, and pyrite
Location: Romania
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| The color
of smoky quartz is variable from brown to
black and sometimes smoky gray colored
specimens are included as smoky quartz. The
very dark stones are called Morion and
Cairngorm. The cause of the color of smoky
quartz is in question but it is almost
certainly related to the amount of exposure
to radiation that the stone has undergone.
Natural smoky quartz often occurs in
granitic rocks that have a small but
persistent amount of radioactivity. Natural
Smoke Quartz crystals are also a product of
irradiation, but by nature in it's own very
slow processes. It occurs as nodules or
fillings of clefts in serpentine rocks and
in weathered materials of nickel ore
deposits. Most smoky quartz that makes its
way to rock shops and to some gem cutters
has been artificially irradiated to produce
a dark black color. Much of the smoky quartz
on the market is in fact irradiated rock
crystal. Brown quartz has been confused with
andalusite, axinite, idocrase, and brown
tourmaline. |

Phantom Smoky Quartz Location: Lincoln
County, New Mexico
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Natural
Smoky Quartz tends to be smoky to the base,
whereas irradiated tends to have a white
crystal base next to the matrix rock. Also
if it is so black you cannot see through it
and it has good surface luster, it is
probably irradiated.
Long ago, the deposit of Frankenstein (Zabkowice)
in Upper Silesia, Poland, was the most
important mine, but it has been worked out
since the 14th century. Today's deposits
include Australia (New South Wales), Brazil,
India, Kazakhstan, Madagascar, Russia (the
Urals), Zimbabwe, South Africa, Tanzania,
Scotland, Ukraine, Switzerland and
California. |

Smokey Quartz Location: Hubei, China
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Smoky
quartz sometimes forms with an etched
pattern of lines, depressions and raised
terminations. If these etched terminations
are accompanied by plainly visible internal
cavities arranged in geometric patterns
related to the quartz crystal structure, the
form is referred to as skeletal or 'Elestial'
quartz. The internal cavities of skeletal
quartz often contain clay minerals of varied
colors, sometimes accompanied by carbon
dioxide or water. These cavities can have a
layered or ribbed aspect and are sometimes
so pronounced as to make the crystal almost
hollow, giving rise to the term skeletal
quartz. Occasionally these cavities contain
both liquid and gas phases together known as
two-phase inclusions. In rare cases, these
two-phase inclusions in skeletal quartz may
show actual movement of the gas phase within
the liquid phase (popularly known as
elestial smoky quartz 'enhydros'). |

tumbled smoky quartz
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Many
different minerals can form as inclusions
within smoky quartz. Some of the more
important varieties of included quartz for
gem use are rutilated quartz and
tourmalinated quartz. Some other common
mineral inclusions in smoky quartz are
chlorite, goethite and hematite.
Phantom quartz shapes are sometimes present
in the interior of smoky quartz crystals,
outlining an earlier stage of the crystal's
formation. These phantoms are usually
composed of other minerals such as chlorite
or other varieties of quartz such as milky
quartz, colorless rock crystal, or smoky
quartz of lighter or darker shades which
form on most or all of the surfaces of the
quartz crystal at a particular point in time
during its growth, after which the quartz
crystal resumes its crystallization
enclosing the phantom crystal outline within
itself. |

rutilated smoky quartz egg
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If a smoky
quartz contains rutilations, it is sometimes
called Smoky Sagenite rather than Rutilated
Quartz. Smoky quartz has been misleadingly
sold as Smoky Topaz. Smoky quartz is now
often cooked at high temperatures to produce
the more profitable orange yellow Citrine.
This process usually creates darker brownish
orange stones, which can be confused with
the deeper color natural Citrine from
Brazil. Radium Diamond is just another name
for Smokey Quartz.
Smoky quartz is popular as an ornamental
stone and is carved into spheres, pyramids,
obelisks, eggs, figurines and ornate
statues. There is also a famous smoky quartz
crystal skull by the name of "ET". It is a
smoky quartz skull found in the early 20th
Century in Central America. It was given its
nickname because its pointed cranium and
exaggerated overbite make it look like the
skull of an alien being. ET is part of the
private collection of Joke Van Dietan, who
tours with her skulls to share the healing
powers she believes they possess. |

smoky quartz pyramid
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In Sri Lanka, quartz
varieties (smoky, citrine, and rock crystal)
are called 'topaz' (in English). The dealers
are not intentionally misleading (though
such a possibility exists), but to them
quartz is English for topaz! To tell the
difference between topaz and smoky quartz,
run your thumb across the table facet.
Practice it! Topaz is very slippery and your
thumb slides across the table facet as if it
were ice while on quartz the thumb "sticks".
Variety of: Quartz
Hardness: 7
Chemical Composition: SiO2 silicon dioxide |

Smoky Quartz Buddha
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History:
The ancient Romans used
smoky quartz to make Intaglio seals.
Smoky Quartz is the national gem of
Scotland.
A crystal ball two and a half inches in
diameter surmounts the Scottish scepter. The
use of such balls has been traced back to
the Druids. They were still known as 'stones
of power' in Sir Walter Scott's days.
Another sphere of smoky quartz, which the
Scots called Cairngorm, is now in the
possession of the British Museum and is
reputed to be the famous 'shew-stone' of Dr.
Dee, the court diviner to Queen Elizabeth I
of England.
The world's largest cairngorm (crystal),
which weighs in at 52lbs, is at Braemar
Castle in Scotland. |

Smoky Quartz Angel
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The Highland Sgian Dubh:
The words above in Gaelic mean 'dubh'
(black) and 'sgian' (dagger). The dagger was
so described because the handle was often
made of bog oak. A very hard wood, jet-black
in appearance, it was useful for the
purpose. It is ornamented, which is a
reflection of the Highlanders' lack of
confidence in paper money. Highlanders would
ornament much of their apparel with valuable
silver and cairngorm stones. They carried on
their person most of their worldly wealth,
not entrusting it to banks. The black dagger
(sgian dubh) was invariably carried in a
place of concealment, very often under his
armpit. This gives support to the view that
'black' does not refer to the color of the
handle but implies 'covert' or 'concealed'.
When the Highlander visited a house on his
travels, having deposited all his other
weapons at the front door, he did not divest
himself of his concealed stabbing dagger,
since in those days it was unsafe to be ever
totally unarmed, not because he feared his
host, but rather because he feared
intrusions from the outside. Accordingly,
although retaining the dagger, out of
courtesy to his host, he removed it from its
place of concealment and put it somewhere
where his host could see it, invariably in
his stocking on the right-hand side if he
was right handed and on the left-hand side
if he was left handed. |

Smoky Quartz obelisks
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As with all quartz, smoky
quartz is an energy conductor and generator.
However, because of its smoky color, it is a
very grounding stone. Smokey quartz
disperses negative patterns and vibrations,
and transmits a high quantity of light. It
purifies the primal instincts (1st chakra),
and helps one get in touch with nature,
excellent for meditation and healing on the
mental and etheric levels.
Smoky helps to reach the goals sent during
psychic dreams, during which it increases
awareness and helps to guide spirits in
channeling dreams. It transforms escapist
attitudes and allows one to let go of what
is not needed to allow growth.
It can be used to gently
dissolve negative energies and emotional
blockages. It can be used to initiate a
powerful force field which will absorb many
forms of negativity, both from within ones
self and from other forces. It promotes
personal pride and joy in living. Smoky
quartz has been used to regulate creativity
in business, and to encourage astute-ness in
purchasing. It works to diffuse
communication deficiencies and to dissolve
mental and emotional blockages that limit
perception and learning. |

Smoky Quartz spheres
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"Ten
Healing Crystals for Men"
Excerpt from: A Guide to Gem and Crystal
Therapy
By Karen Ryan, Crystal Energy Therapist
Smokey Quartz for men:
The "Emotional Balancer Crystal" - Smokey
Quartz is a very specialized crystal for
negative emotional energy. This crystal is
excellent for mood swings, aggressive
actions, ill temper, and generally nasty
thoughts. It grounds all kinds of negative
energy. This stone is helpful for burnout,
fear of failure, reluctance to take risks,
or wanting revenge, as well as for
tendencies to over-eat, smoke or drink due
to stress. It helps you accept
responsibility for yourself, and to broaden
your capacity for effective communication by
dissolving self-limiting perceptions.
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Smoky Quartz beads on smoky quartz specimen
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Morion quartz, and the dark
smoky quartzes, is useful in shadow work,
helping the wearer to face the dark aspects
of self and to release obstacles. They are
grounding and aid in coping with grief.
Morion can be used to bring connection with
the "darker" faces of the deity, such as the
Crone and Hunter archetypes. |
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Teresa's Rock of the Week, formerly Gail's Rock of the Week |
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