The Crystal and Mineral Vault


Welcome to our Crystal and Mineral Knowledge Hub, where science tradition and mindful practice come together. This space is dedicated to exploring the formation properties and cultural associations of crystals and minerals through Mineral Vault profiles and practical guides designed to encourage informed discovery and deeper understanding.

Go to our Mineral Guides for science based knowledge and the 'How to Guides' for spiritual practices.

Larimar Crystal

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Larimar: The Accidental Blue Pectolite Found Nowhere Else on Earth

by Laura Konst
Larimar is blue Pectolite found exclusively in one mine in the Dominican Republic. Pectolite is a common mineral worldwide; the blue colour is not. Trace copper incorporated during hydrothermal crystallisation in basaltic lava cavities produces the pale to deep sky blue that defines the material. This guide covers the formation geology, the copper colour mechanism, quality grading, and why the mineral is common but the colour variety is not.
Fluorite specimen UK

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Fluorite: The Overachiever of the Halide Mineral Family

by Laura Konst
Fluorite named fluorescence, defined hardness 4 on the Mohs scale, and its low-dispersion optics end up in high-end telescope and camera lenses. For a mineral with just two elements in a cubic structure, it has accumulated an improbable scientific CV. This guide covers the colour science behind its extraordinary spectrum, the octahedral cleavage geometry, the fluorescence history, and what Rainbow Fluorite banding actually records.
Carnelian Tower

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Carnelian: The Ancient World's Favourite Orange Gemstone

by Laura Konst
Carnelian has been carved, traded, and worn continuously for over five thousand years, travelling along the earliest known long-distance trade routes from India to Mesopotamia by 3000 BCE. Its orange to reddish-brown colour comes from fine-grained Hematite within a microcrystalline silica matrix, and most commercial material has been heat-treated by a method Indian lapidaries have used for four thousand years. This guide covers the colour chemistry, the heat treatment question, and one of the longest human relationships with any gemstone in the mineral world.
Blue Calcite Rough Crystals

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Blue Calcite: Why This Gentle Blue Crystal Belongs in Both a Collection and a Physics Textbook

by Laura Konst
Blue Calcite is a colour variety of Calcite, one of the Earth's most abundant and scientifically significant minerals. Its pale blue tones arise from trace impurities in sedimentary environments, while its extraordinary birefringence connects it directly to the history of optical science. This guide explores the formation, optical properties, fluorescence, and Calcite family context that make Blue Calcite as interesting to a physicist as it is to a collector.
Kämmererite Sphere

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Kämmererite: Right Element, Wrong Colour, Perfect Explanation

by Laura Konst
Kämmererite is Clinochlore coloured by chromium, the same element that makes Uvarovite green and Fuchsite green. In the Chlorite octahedral site, chromium produces pink to lavender instead. This guide explains why, covers the Chlorite group context, the Turkish source material, and why Kämmererite alongside Uvarovite and Fuchsite is one of the most instructive comparison sets in colour mineralogy.
Almandine Garnet Specimen

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Almandine Garnet: Worn by Anglo-Saxon Kings, Used in Sandpaper, and Your Collection

by Laura Konst
Almandine is the most abundant garnet species and the deep red stone most people picture when they hear the word garnet. Its colour is produced by iron in the dodecahedral sites of the cubic garnet structure, and its presence in metamorphic rocks is used by geologists to reconstruct ancient pressure and temperature conditions. It was also the garnet set in gold cloisons in Anglo-Saxon jewellery, traded from India to Rome two thousand years ago, and is today mined in hundreds of thousands of tonnes annually as an industrial abrasive. This guide covers the iron colour chemistry, the metamorphic geology, the garnet solid solution series, and four thousand years of human use.
Cobalto Calcite Crystal

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Cobaltoan Calcite: The Rarest Colour in the Calcite Family

by Laura Konst
Cobaltoan Calcite is a cobalt-bearing variety of one of the Earth's most common minerals, but the cobalt transforms it entirely: where pure Calcite is colourless to white, the substitution of cobalt ions into the crystal structure produces some of the most vivid pinks and magentas seen anywhere in the mineral world. Crucially, the depth of that colour is a direct measure of cobalt concentration, making every specimen its own chemical record. This guide explores the geology, colour chemistry, and what sets Cobaltoan Calcite apart within the extraordinarily diverse Calcite family.
Pink Halite Crystal

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Pink Halite: It's Salt, But Not the Kind for Your Kitchen

by Laura Konst
Pink Halite is sodium chloride — the same compound as table salt — but the specimen on your shelf is not the same as the pink salt in your kitchen. Where Himalayan salt gets its colour from iron oxides, Pink Halite is coloured by ancient halophilic microorganisms trapped within the crystal as it formed. This guide explores the biology, geology, and surprisingly complex science behind one of the most distinctive and fragile minerals in any collection.
Sugilite Rough Mineral, South Africa

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Sugilite: Discovered in 1944, Forgotten for 30 Years, and Now One of the Most Sought After Minerals on Earth

by Laura Konst
Sugilite was first identified in Japan in 1944, then largely overlooked for three decades. A single discovery at a South African manganese mine in 1975 changed that entirely. Today it is one of the genuinely rare minerals in the collector market, with vivid purple coloration driven by manganese chemistry and a geological origin story unlike almost anything else on the shelf. This guide covers the science, the rarity, and what to look for when buying.
Smokey Quartz Crystal

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Smokey Quartz: One of Earth's Most Abundant Minerals and Its Most Misunderstood

by Laura Konst
Smokey Quartz owes its characteristic hue to natural radiation and the presence of aluminium impurities. It acts as a protective barrier against nightmares, instils a relaxed state of mind during meditation, and offers clear insights, dispelling worries and thoughts of low self-esteem.
Clear Quartz Crystal

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Clear Quartz: The Mineral Inside Your Watch, Your Phone, and Your Collection

by Laura Konst
Clear Quartz is the purest form of one of the most abundant minerals on Earth, built from nothing more than silicon and oxygen. But that simplicity is deceptive. The same mineral regulates the frequency in your watch, underpins the semiconductor industry, and produces some of the most visually extraordinary crystals in the natural world. This guide explores the geology, physics, and remarkable variety of Clear Quartz from the ground up.