Is Your Crystal Real?

If you are reading this you are likely to be a millennial and of the opinion that crystals are a powerful arm of the alternative wellness movement. The other option is that you might also be a ‘rockhound’ – a person who approaches the crystal world with entirely different motivations and knowledge base than the ‘metaphysical practitioner. This article is specifically for those of you who are of the metaphysical mindset. The intent is to help you understand a little bit of the rockhound side of things. We believe both mindsets can exist together, and that there should be a certain harmony between those who live in the crystal world, an open-minded acceptance from either side to the central thing that both views share, a love of nature and natural beauty.

Well you’re not alone as a person who loves crystals, be you metaphysical or a rockhound; the North American market grows at 5% /year and by 2027 it’s expected to be topping 2.3B. Everyone who handles crystals has seen this sudden growth in interest. As Chris Fouts, geological expert in the Bancroft area and owner of “Lakeside Gems points out, “Things were looking pretty grim until COVID, then the interest in crystals seemed to blossom”.

As the current trends indicate, people like you are looking for a product that’s eco-friendly, ethically sourced and glowing with what’s needed to meet your metaphysical demands. Transparency is everything in the emerging crystal market. 2025 sees a trend toward local mining, ethical sourcing and environmental sustainability. Do you think a healing crystal can do its thing when mined by an exploited child or dying asthmatic? Those who accept crystals as an integral part of their well being are also looking for unique and individual crystal specimens that stand out from others of a common type.

As I learned from Steve, our metaphysical guru, your crystals are personal; they must speak to you and draw you to their power. What might be good for one could well be meaningless to another. So is it all tinsel and sparkling surfaces cut to a crystal ideal that you imagine, or is it authenticity, the real thing, a thing of greater power for the purposes that you need?

Now arises the problem of supplier integrity. What kind of retail masochist advertises their product as crap? Out front of their store they post that children mine their product in dangerous, low paid servitude with few ever reaching their teen-aged years without a missing limb. And in a factory, less than impressive agate lumps are shaped into pillars of pseudo-quartz appearance, six sided but missing the real internal and external features of a natural being. Is that the kind of vibe you want hanging over what you understand to be a pure and beautiful thing? It’s like selling beautiful Brazilian Macaws without their wings because they are easier to ship that way and customers find the flapping wings leave stray feathers in the living room.

You think that you have a natural ruby crystal, but it is possibly grown from any of several artificial means. It is only the trained gemologist who can distinguish from inclusions that the stone was grown by humans in ‘flame fusion’ or ‘flux’ processes. A microscope in dark field lighting mode might show swirling smoky structures of flux as opposed to the ‘flattened plains of finger prints or feathers’ of a natural stone. Zircons are often heated, emeralds can be oiled and when quartz contains iron it can be irradiated to go purple or with aluminum it can become smoky. Heating can turn an amethyst to citrine.

Amorphous garbage is out there everywhere posing in fake-crystal form. Chalcedony is a common culprit, it's dyed and treated to take your money and reduce your attempts at healing. With an adulterated stone your efforts become ineffective and after spending and meditating you remain wrought with anxiety and wondering where it all went wrong. Let me tell you, you need the real thing to get legitimate results – blue apatite of natural origins.

Yes, there’s a huge amount of deception in this industry. Being a trained gemologist and partner in “Dark Star Crystal Mines”, I can assure you that a great deal of what you imagine to be ethical, eco-friendly and real is just a shabby smoke screen. Do your stones really draw you or are they just pretty colored lumps that you try so hard to feel an affinity to. Without real unmodified crystals you’re wondering what’s going wrong. Forgery has long been a part of the precious mineral world.

So as a buyer you clearly want natural material and preferably natural crystal faces. The unit cell is the basic building block of a crystal. The cell is an imaginary box with several atoms in a specific spatial arrangement. Stacked in a 3 dimensional way the unit cells form a crystal. Crystals have properties that amorphous stones do not, but it’s also important to understand that appearance isn’t everything. It’s possible to have a perfect crystal with a dull and dreary exterior. A lump or tumbled stone, despite its lack of faces can still be a crystal. The ordered internal structure makes a stone a crystal. An amorphous stone has no internal order (e.g. glass) Steve tells us that external faces are crucial to the power of the stone and once broken the crystal dies, but others say it is just the material that matters – you decide.

So what is a crystal? They can come as great ‘euhedral’ spikes or blocks with perfect well-formed faces. Like people who have had every opportunity, these crystals have grown in ideal situations and have reached their full potential (remember the movie ‘Twins’). The flip side of the equation is the ‘anhedral’ crystals that struggled to express their form in a tight and possibly mal-nourished vug. Personally I think these are the more interesting situations, where possibly your specimen is lanced with inclusions and grown in ways that distort their immediate identity, but that’s just me as a collector. One of my favorite specimens is an amphibole matrix with blocky feldspar lumps that for their imperfect form look like corroded teeth.

It’s usually crystal faces that tell you that you’re looking at a crystal and they can be both of mineral or organic origin – case in point the sharp geometric spires of a ‘weddellite crystal grown on the surface of a human kidney stone. You’ll know of their existence as they tear along your urethra toward their agonizing birth, a toilet bowl being the receptacle into which they fall. Usually a crystal’s external faces are smooth and they reflect the inner building blocks which is an ordered atomic arrangement. The faces in a crystal occur in predictably defined proximities and orientations. In quartz you know its quartz because of the appearance of a little window atop the column that by its placement to the left or right of the structure makes your quartz crystal a left or right handed specimen (who’d have guessed)?

Crystal faces might not always be smooth and could represent certain transitional or unique features. Vertical striations can be seen up the length of a tourmaline prism and it’s not unusual to see trigon pyramids on a diamond. Diamonds grow within the boundaries of the isometric system, and they display certain external forms that others of its system might also display. So a sapphire being in the trigonal crystal system will not naturally come in a cube or octahedron shape, but like diamond, fluorite, garnet and spinel could all be represented by one of those two geometries (or any one of several others) because they are all isometric crystals. Those shapes (cube etc.) are unique to the isometric crystal system.

Upon first entering a transparent crystal, light immediately refracts and splits into 2 separate rays in all but one of the crystal systems. This splitting of paths is measured on a refractometer and individual rays might both move or only one of them might vary in its path. This movement is entirely dependent upon the presence of the optic axis. So for example, a sapphire will be described as having a refractive index of 1.76 – 1.77 and it is said to be ‘positive uniaxial’, that is, only one of the light rays appear to be varying and the fact that it is the ray with the higher reading makes it a uniaxial positive stone. The unvarying ray is travelling along the optic axis, the other ray roves through a defined but varying path.

Symmetry of the external form is probably one of the most common ways to determine which crystal system a crystal belongs to. Simply put most crystals have 3 axes that penetrate invisibly out through the external form; they define the proximity and angle of the faces and also the stone’s relative dimensions. So for example, 3 axis all at 90 degrees to each other and of equal length describe the geometry of an isometric crystal (cube shaped), but with varying lengths and slopes the axis might also define a trigonal, orthorhombic or microcline crystal amongst several other possibilities.

As for crystal faces, quartz sometimes has striations across the length of its prism, it is said to be from the juxtaposition during growth of the rhombohedra and prism faces. The 3 sided tourmaline prism has faces that bow outwards like the crystal has been overfed and deep striations have formed lengthways because of oscillations in growth between the different prism faces. Diamond often has little pyramidal growth features called trigons. Sometimes they are left on the girdle and are features that are used for easy identification.

Now as much as the surface of a stone gives you a good clue as to the stone’s identity, it is the internal properties that really reveal the crystal’s true nature. In lab analysis light is used to measure certain features that are unique to every crystal species. As optical density increases, so in turn is the degree to which a light ray is further bent in its path through a crystal. It’s a predictable thing that’s mathematically defined and so in a transparent stone you can determine exactly what it is by its various refractive properties (mainly the degree to which a light ray bends in a substance of greater optical density) and the maximum separation between the roving ray and the optic axis. This separation is called the crystal’s birefringence.

So you see, crystals are a complex variety of natural wonder. Not every shiny or colored stone is a crystal; many are simulants, or synthetics. A stimulant looks like what it is supposed to imitate, a synthetic has been made in a lab, it’s the material that you are expecting with the same properties, but it’s artificial. So back to sapphire, it has the chemical formula of Al2O3, but it can come from a Sri Lankan stream or equally a lab where its grown in sterile measured exactitude. Which one has the power or do they both? Is it simply the material that counts, or the whole process of birth in the womb of the earth?

In a faceted stone the inclusions or cheap cut often give it away as an imposter, but if you are looking at the raw crystal, with extraction dirt, a base of country rock and various imperfections they give a better clue as to authenticity.

Doing our market research we as partners in the Dark Star enterprise have entered several metaphysical shops and seen as a staple the towers and wands of striated chalcedony. Invariably they are shaped artificially to seem like some fanciful crystal. The agate has been dyed and heated and you’ll never see a shape like that in nature. Admittedly chalcedony is crystalline (composed of millions of tiny, randomly oriented crystals), but a geometric form should not be appearing in a crystalline substance.

These fake crystals are often sold to buyers who base the worth of a crystal on how bright and sparkly it is. Bright and sparkly is great in a circus, but I’d wonder whether that’s a rule to follow when looking for powerful ‘earth crystals’. Your crystals need to possess the ordered internal structure of something that’s made by nature – something real not a decoration.

Quite clearly there is an established understanding as to what it is exactly that comprises that wonderful thing that we call a crystal. You do your practice or collection an injustice by embracing an imitation. Thus far I have explained some basic properties from a scientific angle as to what comprises a crystal, but with some thought its possible to see the links and commonalities with the spiritual approach as well. To link the two views as one and the same is still a little way off in our collective understanding, but we believe this will eventually become a reality.

We at Dark Star Crystal Mine harvest our crystals from a world class vein-dyke plain in northern Ontario. We have an enormous stock from what was once Bear Lake 1 diggings and in time will hopefully also reach lease on our current claim and be able to offer you what we find from there.

We can personally vouch for our extraction practices and as we are our own employees we endeavor to pay ourselves as fairly as possible (and maybe even an unwarranted bonus from time to time). We do what we do because we love crystals and it’s not our only choice for a living (but it’s the choice we like). There is nothing that we sell from our mines that has been adulterated in any way and if you are looking for a one of a kind specimen we are the people to provide. There is no one specimen that is the same and with 72 varieties of amphibole those black power clumps likely contain a variety of amazing species, some of which at this time might still be unknown to science. We can even tell you the fissure from which your crystal came. Most of our crystals are from the microcline system, formed with an internal structure of double chain tetrahedron. We guarantee our product’s origin because we are the ones who lift it from the ground.