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Quartz, var. Amethyst
Posted by: Raymond McDougall on 08.10.2024 | Filed under:

Quartz, var. Amethyst

Specimen # 103158
Mineral: Quartz, var. Amethyst
Location: Mamuju area, Sulawesi Barat Province, Sulawesi, Indonesia
Size: 5.4 x 4.9 x 1.5 cm

Description

Detailed Description

A gorgeous, and different specimen of amethyst balls from Mamuju. This piece is a floater with no point of attachment, but it is not a grouping of loose balls – rather, it is like a curtain of balls, very 3-D, associated with transparent colourless “wheat-sheaf-like” quartz groupings. This piece is top colour, top sparkle and top quality (pristine!). It looks good in several different orientations and is so good all-around that I can’t decide on which side is better (!). Superb!


About These Indonesian “Grape Amethyst” Specimens

Originally referred to as “grape agate”, specimens were first found in the Mamuju area in 2015. These specimens are recovered from clay, in the spaces between the “pillows” in pillow lava.  Although they were first known as “grape agate”, they are not cryptocrystalline (and therefore are not agate) – they are balls of radiating crystalline quartz. When the find first came to market, there was a large amount of material, much of which was poor quality. The diggers then began to produce higher quality specimens. The article on this material in the Mineralogical Record (Nov-Dec. 2018) predicted that the production of fine specimens would decline and it speculated, based upon local sources, that all specimen mining of the pillow lava deposits would likely cease by about 2023 or 2024. Production of very fine specimens has indeed declined, although it has continued to a lesser degree, thanks to considerable financing from dealers abroad. It seems likely that the decline will continue. As with all mineral specimen localities, the ultimate accuracy of such speculation varies. In this case, the limited geographical extent of the known pillow lava deposits is a key factor.

Please Note: the colour representation in the still photographs has been carefully calibrated and adjusted to show an accurate rendition of this specimen in daylight (shade). The colours in the video are not similarly adjusted.