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Bertrandite, sometimes called tiffany
stone or ice cream opalite, is beryllium silicate hydroxide, in everyday
language you’d call it opalized fluorite. It is only recently that it has come on
scene in the mainstream jewelry industry. Once you have seen it’s easy to see why it is
gaining in popularity. Bertrandite does look like ice cream, blueberry. I
don’t think I’d take a bite though; it’s an ore of beryllium.
I do not know the date of its discovery;
however, it is not listed in my 1915 copy of “Dana’s Manual of Mineralogy”, the
standard mineralogy text of its day. Scanty information is available on the
internet.
Bertrandite’s hardness is about 4; which
makes it unacceptable for use in rings but fine for pendants and earrings.
Lore
Said to be called tiffany stone because
some stones look like the patterns in tiffany glass. Some think that it is a
reference to Tiffany Co., the New York jewelry store.
Because of its recent (in historical
terms) discovery one has to look to the minerals that combine to make
bertrandite to better understand its metaphysical properties. Both opal and
fluorite have been discussed earlier in their own sections of this work.
Bertrandite “. . . can assist one in
conservatism in judgment, in generosity with respect to favour, and in
stimulating the growth of appreciation” 1
A number of the references say that
bertrandite is a stone for business and business success. Most agree that it
has a beneficial effect on the third eye chakra. It is also said that
bertrandite can boost the sex drive and enhance sexual experience.
1) A. Melody "Love
is in the Earth- A Kaleidoscope of Crystals" pg. 79
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