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.

Large Malachite Statement piece with stalactites

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Malachite: From Ancient Egyptian Cosmetics to the Winter Palace

by Laura Konst
Malachite is a copper carbonate mineral whose vivid banded greens have made it one of the most recognisable and historically significant minerals in the world. From ancient Egyptian eye makeup to the Malachite Room of the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg, its colour has shaped human culture for over six thousand years. This guide explores its formation, its relationship with Azurite, the chemistry behind its banding, and everything you need to know to care for it in a collection.
Azurite Specimen

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Azurite: The Mineral That Coloured Medieval Paintings

by Laura Konst
Azurite is a deep blue copper carbonate mineral formed in the oxidised zones of copper deposits, and its colour is one of the most saturated natural blues known to mineralogy. For centuries it was ground into pigment and used by European painters to render skies, robes, and heavens in works that hang in museums today, where that same blue is slowly converting to green Malachite through the same chemical process that affects every Azurite specimen in a collection. This guide explores the copper chemistry, the Azurite-Malachite relationship, and the geological and cultural story behind one of the mineral world's most visually compelling specimens.
Chalcopyrite Crystal

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Chalcopyrite: The Copper Ore Behind Modern Electricity

by Laura Konst
Chalcopyrite is the world's most important copper ore mineral, the source of more copper than any other mineral in history, from Bronze Age smelting to the electrical wiring of modern buildings and the batteries of electric vehicles. It is also one of the most visually distinctive sulphide minerals available to collectors, producing a vivid iridescent tarnish through the same thin-film interference physics that colours soap bubbles. This guide explores the copper sulphide chemistry, the geology of copper ore deposits, the peacock tarnish mechanism, and how to distinguish Chalcopyrite from Pyrite and Gold.  
Turquoise Crystals

The Crystal and Mineral Vault

Turquoise: From Tutankhamun's Burial Mask to the American Southwest

by Laura Konst
Turquoise is one of the oldest gemstones in continuous human use, found in the burial mask of Tutankhamun, the mosaics of Persian palaces, and the silverwork of the American Southwest. This Mineral Vault guide explores how it forms, what causes its blue-to-green colour range, how to navigate the heavily treated commercial market, and why this copper phosphate mineral has captivated cultures across five thousand years of history.