Rare Ammolite
Ammolite is a rare gemstone of organic origin that is fairly
new to the market, with commercial mining beginning only in 1981. Ammolite is
the fossilized shell of ammonites, which are composed primarily of aragonite,
the same mineral that makes up nacreous pearls. Ammolite's main attraction is
an opal-like play of color.
Properties
The chemical composition of ammolite is variable, and aside
from aragonite may include calcite, silica, pyrite, or other minerals. The
shell itself may contain a number of trace elements, including: aluminium;
barium; chromium; copper; iron; magnesium; manganese; strontium; titanium; and
vanadium. Its crystallography is orthorhombic. Its hardness is 4.5–5.5, quite
soft for a gemstone, and its specific gravity is 2.60–2.85. The refractive
index of Canadian material (as measured via sodium light, 589.3 nm) is as follows:
α 1.522; β 1.672–1.673; γ 1.676–1.679; biaxial negative. Under ultraviolet
light, ammolite may fluoresce a
mustard yellow.
An iridescent opal-like play of color is shown in fine
specimens, mostly in shades of green and red; all the spectral colors are possible,
however. The iridescence is due to the microstructure of the aragonite: unlike
most other gems, whose colors come from light absorption, the iridescent color
of ammolite comes from interference with the light that rebounds from stacked
layers of thin platelets that make up the aragonite. The thicker the layers,
the more reds and greens are produced; the thinner the layers, the more blues
and violets predominate. Reds and greens are the most commonly seen colors,
owing to the greater fragility of the finer layers responsible for the blues.
When freshly quarried, these colors are not especially dramatic; the material
requires polishing and possibly other treatments in order to reveal the colors'
full potential.
The ammolite itself is actually a very thin sheet, ca.
0.5–0.8 millimeters (0.02–0.03 inches) in thickness. Rarely is ammolite without
its matrix, which is typically a grey to brown shale, chalky clay, or
limestone. So-called "frost shattering" is common; exposed to the
elements and compressed by sediments, the thin ammolite tends to crack and
flake; prolonged exposure to sunlight can also lead to bleaching. The cracking
results in a tessellated appearance, sometimes described as a "dragon
skin" or "stained glass window" pattern. Ammolite mined from
deeper deposits may be entirely smooth or with a rippled surface. Occasionally
a complete ammonite shell is recovered with its structure well-preserved: fine,
convoluted lines delineate the shell chambers, and the overall shape is
suggestive of a nautilus. While these shells may be as large as 90 centimeters
(35.5 inches) in diameter, the iridescent ammonites (as opposed to the
pyritized variety) are typically much smaller. Most fossilized shells have had
their aragonite pseudomorphously replaced by calcite or pyrite, making the
presence of ammolite particularly uncommon.
Gemstone
quality
The quality of gem ammolite is communicated via a letter
grade system, from most desirable to least desirable: AA; A+; A; and A-.
However, this system is not yet standardized and some vendors may use their own
systems. The grade and therefore the value of an ammolite gemstone is
determined by the following criteria:
The
number of primary colors
A large array of color is displayed in ammolite, including all
the spectral colors found in nature. Red and green are far more common than
blue or purple due to the latter's fragility (see properties). There are also
certain hues, like crimson or violet or gold, which are derived from a
combination of the primary colors, that are the rarest and in highest demand.
The most valuable grades have roughly equal portions of three or more primary
colors or 1–2 bright and even colors, with the lowest grades having one
comparatively dull color predominant.
The way the colors play (chromatic shift and rotational
range)
Chromatic shift is how the colors vary with the angle of
viewing and the angle of light striking the gemstone; in higher grades this
variation is almost prismatic in its scope, while lower grades show very little
variation. Rotational range is how far the specimen can be turned while
maintaining its play of color; the best rotate 360 degrees uncompromised, while
lesser stones may exhibit highly directional colors that are only visible
within a narrow rotational range, down to 90° or less. Intermediate grades have
ranges of 240–180°.
Brightness
of colors (iridescence)
The brightness of colors and their iridescence is
essentially dependent on how well-preserved the nacreous shell is, and how fine
and orderly the layers of aragonite are. The quality of the polish is also a
factor. The "dragon skin" cracking usually hinders its value; the
most prized ammolite is the sheet type (see formation) and has broad,
uninterrupted swathes of color similar to the "broad flash" category
of opal. The matrix is not visible in finer grades, and there should be no
foreign minerals breaking up or diminishing the iridescence.
The thickness of the ammolite layer is also an important
factor: after polishing, the ammolite is only 0.1–0.3 millimeters thick. The
rarest and most valuable are thick enough to stand alone, with only a thin
portion of its original matrix (not exceeding 1.5 mm); but the vast majority
require some sort of supportive backing. Other treatments are also commonly undertaken;
all other factors being equal, the less treatment an ammolite gem has received,
the more valuable it is. Calibrated stones—that is, stones fashioned into
standard dimensions that will fit most jewelry settings—may also command a
higher price.
Treatments
Although fully mineralized and containing no water—and
therefore not subject to dehydration and subsequent crazing as seen in
opal—ammolite is often damaged due to environmental exposure. The thin,
delicate sheets in which ammolite occurs are also problematic; for these
reasons, most material is impregnated with a clear epoxy or other synthetic
resin to stabilize the flake-prone ammolite prior to cutting. Although the
tessellated cracking cannot be repaired, the epoxy prevents further flaking and
helps protect the relatively soft surface from scratching. The impregnation
process was developed over a number of years by Korite International in
partnership with the Alberta Research Council. Impregnated and epoxy-coated
ammolite first entered the market in 1989 and the treatment significantly
increased the availability and durability of the gem.
Because the ammolite layer is usually mere fractions of a
millimeter in thickness, most ammolite gems are in fact composite stones: these
usually take the form of two-part
doublets, with the ammolite layer adhered to
a dark backing material. This is usually the matrix or mother rock from which
the ammolite was quarried; black onyx or glass could also be used as backing.
In composites where the ammolite layer is exceptionally thin, a third component
is used: this constitutes a triplet, with a durable and transparent convex
topping piece. This cap may be either synthetic spinel, synthetic corundum,
synthetic quartz, or in lower-end productions, glass. The convex cap acts as a
lens and has the effect of enhancing the ammolite's iridescent display.
The detection of these treated and composite stones is
relatively simple via inspection with a loupe; however, certain jewelry setting
styles—such as those with closed backs—can complicate things. A triplet can be
identified by inspecting the stone in profile; the top of the stone can then be
seen to be domed and transparent, with no play of color. If the dome is made of
glass, bubbles, swirl marks, and scratches may be present; the harder synthetic
materials are optically flawless.
Although the vast majority of commercial-grade ammolite has
been treated in some way, a small fraction of production requires no treatment
other than cutting and polishing. Ideally, any treatments should be disclosed
at the time of sale.
Imitations
The iridescent flashes (labradorescence) of labradorite may
lead to its confusion with ammolite by the unfamiliar, but the overall
appearance is unconvincing as an imitation.
Ammolite is neither easily nor often imitated; however, a
few materials have a passing resemblance that may deceive the unfamiliar. These
include: labradorite (also known as spectrolite), an iridescent feldspar also
of Canadian origin; and broad-flash black opal. Neither are convincing
substitutes, and the latter is actually of greater value than ammolite. Indeed,
ammolite is often used as an imitation of black opal. An even less convincing
possibility is Slocum stone, a common glass-based imitation of opal. Blues and
purples are
stone, the play of color takes the form of tinsel-like patches. The visible structure is also considerably different; in the imitations, the body of the stone is transparent to translucent from certain angles, whereas ammolite is entirely opaque.
Gemologically speaking, ammolite can be grouped with the shell-based
marbles. This group includes lumachella or "fire marble", a similarly
iridescent marble composed of fossilized clam and snail shells. Found in Italy
and Austria, lumachella is rarely if ever used in jewelry; rather, it is used
as a decorative facing stone or in mosaics. The iridescence of lumachella is
fragmentary and not nearly as brilliant as that of ammolite. Despite these
differences, lumachella may be considered synonymous with ammolite in some
circles.
The predominantly blue-green iridescent shell of abalone (or
paua; genus Haliotis) is one last possible imitation. Abalone shell is
inexpensive and plentiful owing to the commercial mariculture of these
gastropods for their meat. The shell's structure is distinctive: sinuous bands
of blue, green, and rose iridescence are delineated by dark brown lines of
conchiolin, a proteinaceous material that holds the shell together. The luster
of abalone shell is silky rather than the near vitreous luster of polished
ammolite, and the colors of the two materials do not closely approximate.
However, some abalone shell has been dyed and given a transparent cap of
synthetic quartz, forming a doublet in the same fashion as ammolite. These
doublets are perhaps the most deceptive, and have also been used to imitate
opal. Under magnification most abalone doublets will show dye concentrated
along certain areas and air bubbles trapped at the shell-quartz interface.
Use in
jewelry
Fine ammolite jewelry by Korite International. The ammolite
gems are triplets, as evidenced by their convex profiles, and are set in 14
karat (58%) gold with diamond accents. Ammolite is best used in pendants,
earrings, and brooches due to its fragility.
Compared to most other gems, ammolite has a rather scant
history of use; it did not begin to garner interest in Western society until
the 1970s after entering the market (to a limited degree) in 1969. The
Blackfeet tribe know ammolite as iniskim, meaning "buffalo stone",
and have long believed it to possess amuletic powers; specifically, the gem is
believed to aid in the buffalo hunt, and to draw the buffalo within tracking
distance. The Blackfeet also believe ammolite to possess healing powers and
incorporate the gem into their medicine bundles for use in ceremonies.
In the late 1990s, practitioners of Feng Shui began to
promote ammolite as an "influential" stone with what they believe is
the power to enhance well-being and detoxify the body by improving its flow of
energy or "chi".[citation needed] Named the "Seven Color
Prosperity Stone", each color is believed by Feng Shui practitioners to
influence the wearer in different and positive ways; a combination of ruby red,
emerald green, and amber yellow is most sought after for this purpose, the
colors being said to enhance growth, wisdom, and wealth, respectively.[citation
needed]
Ammolite is usually fashioned into freeform cabochons and
mounted in gold, with diamonds as accents. Due to its delicacy, ammolite is
best reserved for use in pendants, earrings, and brooches; if used as a ring
stone, ammolite should be given a hard protective cap, namely one of synthetic
spinel as used in triplets. Whole polished ammonites of appropriately small
size may also be mounted in jewelry. Nothing harsher than mild soap and warm
water should be used to clean ammolite jewelry; ultrasonic cleaning should be
avoided.
Japan is the largest market for ammolite; this may be due to
its use as an imitation of increasingly scarce black opal, or its
aforementioned use in Feng Shui. Secondary markets include Canada, where it is
used both by artisans who sell their creations to tourists of Banff
National
Park and in fine jewelry production; and the Southwest United States, where it
is used by Zuni and other Native American craftspeople.
Ammolite, a semi-precious opal-like organic gemstone found
primarily along the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains of North America. It
is made of the fossilized shells of ammonites, which in turn are composed
primarily of aragonite, the same mineral that makes up nacreous pearls. It is
one of several biogenic gemstones; others include amber and pearl.1 In 1981, ammolite
was given official gemstone status by the World Jewellery Confederation, the
same year commercial mining of ammolite began. It was designated the official
gemstone of the Province of Alberta in 2004 and the official gemstone of the
City of Lethbridge in 2007.[2][3]
Ammolite is also known as aapoak (Kainah for "small,
crawling stone"), gem ammonite, calcentine, and korite. The latter is a
trade name given to the gemstone by the Alberta-based mining company Korite
International, the first and largest commercial producer of ammolite.
An iridescent opal-like play of color is shown in fine
specimens, mostly in shades of green and red, though all the spectral colors
are possible. The iridescence is due to the microstructure of the aragonite:
unlike most other gems, whose colors come from light absorption, the iridescent
color of ammolite comes from interference with the light that rebounds from
stacked layers of thin platelets that make up the aragonite. The thicker the
layers, the more reds and greens are produced; the thinner the layers, the more
blues and violets predominate.
The ammolite itself is actually a very thin sheet, about 0.5
- 0.8 millimeters in thickness. Ammolite is almost always found in matrix,
which is typically a grey to brown shale, chalky clay, or limestone.
The Metaphysical Properties of Ammonites and
Ammolite
Do fossils have metaphysical properties?
Fossils are neglected in modern stone books but they are a
potent union of the mineral and animal kingdoms. Metaphysical properties can be
drawn both from their geology and biology and many were used for spiritual
reasons historically.
What is an ammonite?
The Ammonoidea or ammonites (“am-uh-nights”) are an extinct
group of shelled cephalopods that lived ~400 to ~65 million years ago. The name
may specifically refer to one branch of them, the Ammonitida, that lived ~200
to ~65 million years ago. Their living relatives include the octopus, squid,
and nautilus.
Ammonites lived in an external chambered shell, usually in
the shape of a coiled spiral. Depending on the species, it could also be
straight, partially bent, or corkscrewed. Their body was in the last and
largest chamber. As they grew they added progressively bigger compartments to
the mouth of their shell, walling off the old ones.
This chambered shell is called a phragmacone
(“frah-muh-cone”), from the Greek phragmo, “fence, enclosure, partition”, +
konos, “cone”. A thin organ called a siphuncle (“sigh-fung-kuhl”) connected
each segment to the body chamber like a strand of beads. The word comes from
the Latin sīphunculus, meaning “a little siphon”. They used this tube to maintain
their buoyancy, regulating the mixture of water and gas in each compartment
through their blood.
Ammonites may be found with a small curved shell called an
aptychus (“ap-tea-cus”) or a symmetrically mirrored pair of them. The word
comes from the Greek aptychon, “a folding panel with two parts”. There is
debate among scientists if they were part of their jaw, a protective cover like
the hood of a nautilus, or both. While ammonite shells were grown from
aragonite, the aptychus was made from calcite. Although they are chemically
related, calcite is more durable so many were preserved on their own, washed
away from their shells. They were misidentified historically as a species of
clam.
Although an incredible number of shells are preserved, very
little soft tissue was fossilized. Therefore no one knows what an ammonite
looked like exactly. Although their shells resemble a nautilus, their teeth are
similar to the octopus and squid. So a spiral shelled animal with eight to ten
tentacles is the best deduction.
What
symbolism did ammonites have in antiquity?
The word ammonite references a historic name for the fossil.
The first century CE Roman naturalist Pliny the Elder called them hammonis
cornu, meaning “the horns of Ammon”. Ammon is the Latinized version of the name
Amun, the ancient Egyptian god of creation, later interpreted as a form of Zeus
by the Greeks. Amun was depicted as a ram, a man with
the head or horns of a
ram, or a ram headed sphinx. Pliny states:
“The horns of Ammon [“ammonite”] is reckoned among the most
sacred gems of Aethiopia [“the upper region of the Nile”]; it is of a golden
color, like a ram's horn in shape, and ensures prophetic dreams, it is said.”
Do the
historical lapidaries mention ammonites?
Many historical gem books include stones found in animals.
Some actually come from living creatures like bezoars, mineral concretions
produced in the digestive tract, while others have proven to be fossils. Most
period “toadstones”, allegedly from the head of a toad, are instead teeth from
the extinct fish species Lepidotes.
Likewise some scholars believe the legendary draconites,
found in the head of a snake or dragon, could be an actual stone. Something
with a resemblance, like the toadstone. Ammonites are a strong candidate since
some draconites were described as displaying a serpent pattern. Depending on
the text, it protected the wearer from poisons, venomous creatures, or
adversaries.
Ammonites actually have a long association with serpents.
According to English legend, the 7th century Saint Hilda of Whitby turned an
infestation of snakes to stone to allow for the construction of an abbey. These
petrified “snakestones” are ammonites. Sometimes artists would carve or paint a
head on them, to produce pious souvenirs. English fossil hunters during the
early 19th century called ammonites cornemonius, a corruption of their Latin
name hammonis cornu.
Ammonites were used in folk medicine across Europe for snake
bites, fertility, and birthing pains. In 18th century Germany and England they
were added to water as “drakestones” (“dragonstone”) or “crampstones” to treat
livestock.
What do
ammonites mean in some Native American traditions?
To the Niitsitapi nation (“Blackfoot”), portions of
ammonites, baculites, and other fossils are iniskim, meaning “buffalo stone,
buffalo calling stone”. Baculites are a variety of ammonite
with only a
slightly bent shell. Fossil ammonites often come apart, breaking down into
their individual chambers. Those with sutures become lobed, roughly resembling
an animal, traditionally a buffalo. According to legend the first iniskim
revealed itself during a famine to a young woman. It taught her the songs and
ceremonies required to call the buffalo to be hunted. They reveal their
presence by chirping like a bird and are associated with abundance, good luck,
and healing.
What do
ammonites represent in Hinduism?
Stones can have a special relationship to the divine in
Hinduism, like the egg shaped linga of Shiva and the rounded black shaligram
shila or salagram shila of Vishnu. Shila/Sila means “stone” in Sanskrit,
shaligram/saligram is a regional name of Vishnu, and shalagram/salagram refers
to a location where they are found. In Hindu thought God takes on different
forms for the benefit of humanity. Vishnu is the divine as preserver. He is
typically depicted as blue skinned, carrying a mace, lotus, conch shell, and a
discus like weapon called a chakra.
The shila or salagram is a fossil concretion from the
Gandaki River in Nepal, often with prominent ammonites. They are typically
black in color but pyrite inclusions may make them golden. The fossil patterns
are believed to represent sacred symbols like the attributes of Vishnu,
especially his chakra. In mythology Vishnu transformed into vajra kita, aquatic
worms as hard as diamonds, to carve them. An interpretation of the snake like
ammonites found inside. The stones are traditionally used for devotion.
What do
they mean in Chinese culture?
Some feng shui practitioners recommend ammonite and
ammolite, an iridescent ammonite shell used as a gemstone, as wealth cures.
Ammolite may be known by the trade name “kirin stone”, after the mythical
Chinese composite animal, more commonly spelled qilin or ch'i-lin. They
symbolize non-violence, virtue, and longevity. The iridescence of ammolite is
said to resemble their fiery scales.
19th century English texts say the Chinese call ammonites
the "kosmos stone", for its resemblance to their symbol for the
cosmos. They mean its comma-like shape
resembles
the black and white sections of the taijitu (“yin and yang symbol”),
especially as a pair. The spiral of an
ammonite is believed to draw in chi (“spiritual energy”) and radiate it out,
promoting abundance, health, and well being.
The
Hidden Virtues of Ammonite
The metaphysical properties of a fossil are revealed in its
geology, cultural associations, and effect on the chakra system:
1. Fossil: Because of their literal connection to the past,
fossils support longevity, memory, and past life recall. They are also used to
contact spirit guides, honor ancestors, or connect to ancient sources of
knowledge. Ammonites are especially well suited for past life work since they
are used as an index fossil. They help date the rock layers in which they are
found because of their wide distribution, large numbers, and specific time
span.
Ammonites only lived in the last chamber of their shell,
using their phragmacone to stay afloat. Sometimes we are so focused on the
future or the past, including our past lives, we neglect today. Use ammonites
to regain perspective on the present, to integrate information about the past
or potential future, or reorient after altered states of consciousness like
shamanic journeying.
2. Shell: Because they come from the ocean, shells are
connected to the Moon, water, and qualities culturally associated with the
feminine like intuition, emotions, and the unconscious. Because ammonites are
fossilized shells, they help transform the emotional past, releasing
dysfunctional family patterns, childhood trauma, or suppressed feelings. Lunar
materials are also associated with sleep, dreams, and techniques like lucid
dreaming. This is especially true for ammonites since they were used
historically for prophetic dreams.
3. Home: Both shells and materials ruled by the Moon
symbolize the home. A lot of ammonite terminology is domestic: their shell is a
phragmacone, Greek, “a cone of fences”, each chamber is a camera, Latin “a
vaulted room”, and the dividers between them are septa, Latin, “walls”. Because
of this architectural connection, ammonites are used for the spiritual protection
of a house. Since the animal moved from chamber to chamber as it grew, walling
off the old ones, they support individuals selling a home, in the process of
moving, or adjusting to a new location.
4. Spiral: Both ammonite and nautilus shells are commonly used
to illustrate the golden spiral, a growth pattern based on the Fibonnaci
sequence with a ratio of 1.618. Unfortunately research suggests this is only
rarely true. The nautilus is a logarithmic spiral but its average ratio is
1.33. Because these numbers are close, the inner chambers resemble the golden
spiral but the outer ones deviate from it. While an individual shell may be a
golden spiral, it is not true for all of them.
The 17th century Swiss mathematician Jakob Bernoulli called
the logarithmic spiral the spira mirabilis (Latin, “miraculous spiral”) because
of its importance for living things. It allows
shells to grow larger, without
having to change their shape. Bernoulli wrote:
“... since our spira mirabilis [“miraculous spiral”, ie.
logarithmic spiral] remains, amid all changes, most persistently itself, and
exactly the same as ever, it may be used as a symbol, either of fortitude and
constancy in adversity, or, of the human body; which after all its changes,
even after death, will be restored to its exact and perfect self...”
Ammonites are associated with change, resiliency, and
overcoming obstacles. Like the labyrinth, the spiral represents the journey of
life, death and rebirth, and repeated cycles like the seasons and movement of
celestial bodies. The spiral shell of the ammonite literally represents their
life, created as they added chambers to the open end of their shell. Cross
sections of an ammonite are popular wedding gifts because they represent a
journey and two parts coming together to make a whole.
5. Animal Totems: An octopus in a nautilus shell that looks
like a ram, snake, dragon, or buffalo. Rarely does one fossil have so many
animal relationships. Ammonites can be used to connect spiritually to any of
these medicines or animal totems in general.
6. Abundance: Ammonites represent abundance in several
cultures. The Zeus and horn connection even suggests the cornucopia (Latin,
“horn of plenty”). One variety of ammonites is named after it. When he was an
infant, Zeus was hidden in a cave from his tyrannical father Cronus. A goat
named Amalthea nursed him. When he accidentally broke off one of her horns, it
became a symbol of divine generosity, overflowing with food and drink.
7. Aligning the Chakras: Energy follows the structure of a
material, producing a similar effect within us. An ammonite shell is a series
of chambers, connected together by the siphuncle tube, which regulated the
balance of water and gas in each section. The chakra system is very similar. In
the original Hindu and Buddhist models, spiritual energy flows through the
subtle body along channels called nadi (Sanskrit, “flow, river, conduit”). The
body has three main nadi, one in the spinal column and two that wrap around it.
The chakras occur where they intersect.
Because of this structural similarity, ammonite and nautilus
fossils are used to adjust the flow
of energy in the nadi, aligning the
chakras. In most nautilus species the siphuncle tube is centrally located. In
most ammonite species, it is found along the bottom of the chambers instead.
This suggests that a nautilus is better suited for the central nadi and an
ammonite the side channels, although either can be used. They can even be
combined to balance the entire system. However the snake symbolism of ammonites
associates them with kundalini, which is produced in the central channel by
joining together the energies of the side ones.
8. Balancing the Chakras: In many spiritual traditions
clockwise motion is used to open and counter clockwise is used to close.
Clockwise vs. counterclockwise is always a matter of perspective. On one side
of an ammonite, moving from the mouth to the center of the shell is clockwise,
on the other side, counterclockwise. From the center to the mouth instead is
reversed. A chakra that is too open or too closed is out of balance. Running
energy through an ammonite in a specific direction can help regulate a chakra:
out or clockwise to help open, in or counterclockwise to help close.
9. Healing Properties: Ammonites were used historically for
fertility, pregnancy, and birth in both people and animals. Fossils in general
are related to Saturn, astrologically oriented healers recommend them for parts
of the body ruled by it like the legs, bones, joints, teeth, skin, and hair.
Because they come from the ocean, ammonites are also linked to the Moon, which
rules the breasts, stomach, digestive system, and womb.
Healers who use the modern chakra system instead associate
fossils with the Root Chakra. Because most ammonites are brown, reddish orange,
to golden yellow in color, they connect to the Root (brown and red), Second
(orange), Third (yellow), and Crown (gold) Chakras. They support parts of the
body below the heart and the top of the head.
From Simone Matthews of UniversalLifeTools.com In nature,
the Ammolite shell forms a spiral referred to as the ‘golden mean spiral’ which
is a mathematical representation of the fibonacci sequence of numbers. This
mathematical sequence is the foundation upon which nature continually expands
and evolves. In the human body, our DNA twists, our chakras energetically turn
and the proportion of our body parts in relationship to each other are all made
manifest according to this magical number sequence.
Plants grow, flowers bloom and our spiral galaxy turns in
relationship to the spiral. This sacred spiral is so deeply engrained in our
world that it forms the basis of architecture, music, economics and the
aesthetics of art. Thus Ammolite, as a direct conduit of the energetics of
golden mean spiral, is a sacred gemstone which we can work with for our own
personal awakening and for the evolutionary consciousness of the planet.
This crystal awakens our awareness of the evolutionary shift
in consciousness that is happening around the world as we come to the end of
many cycles of creation. On the 21 December 2012, on the Summer/Winter solstice
at 11:11 UT (Universal Time), we come to the end of a 225 million year galactic
cycle (the time it takes for our solar system to make one complete revolution
around the core of our Milky Way Galaxy), we come to the end of a 26,000 year
cycle (the movement of our Solar System through every house of the zodiac) and
we come to the end of a 5,125 year cycle of the Mayan longcount calendar. This
generation thus sits on the threshold of an evolutionary shift in
consciousness, a quantum leap into a new world as we begin the next
evolutionary cycle of our planet and galaxy.
Ammolite is one of the key crystals on Earth today that we
can work with in order to be conscious and active leaders of this evolutionary
shift. Ammolite assists us in anchoring our energy field into the
electromagnetic field of mother Earth, and into her crystalline core to assist
us in fully awakening our DNA. As our ‘junk DNA’ becomes active, we have the
potential to grow as a human species in LOVE, consciously Living the One
Vibrational Energy that gives rise to all of creation. As we grow in LOVE we
honour our diversity, and come together in unity and enduring peace.
Traditionally, Ammolite is placed over the Light Activation Point (the energy
centre just above the third-eye) or worn as a pendant over the higher-heart, to
support its greatest potential of weaving the threads of awakened wisdom
through every level of being. Within our holographic universe each of us are
fractals of the whole, thus as we individually embrace our highest potential,
we are the highest frequencies of light, love and illumination for all of
creation to do the same.
From Judy Hall: A powerful earth healing stone, Ammolite
contains the wisdom of the ancients and was worn on the forehead for
consciousness activation, metaphysical powers and interdimensional exploration.
It is particularly effective when placed on the soma chakra. Representing
coming full circle, Ammolite takes you into your centre and into completion.
Activating your own personal empowerment, it converts negative energy into a
gently flowing positive spiral. Ammolite relieves birth trauma affecting the
cranio-sacral flow and is helpful in all cranio-sacral work.
A powerful karmic cleanser, it releases mental obsessions.
Ammolite is said to radiate positive Earth energy, and to bring good luck and
prosperity. It is also said to grant miracles. Ammolite is excellent as a tool
for deep meditation.
Ammolite is also used
mystically for general good health, stamina and high energy. Feng Shui
followers believe Ammolite has the power to detoxify the body and improve
overall well being by improving the body’s flow if energy. Feng Shui supporters
also believe that each different color of Ammolite influences the wearer
differently.
Beautiful!!!
Could you please tell me where I can buy a small quantity of rough ammolite or ammonite from the Blackfeet tribe member?
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Wow, looking very admirable and informative details of description for these rare ammolite origin and its history. Thanks a lot for sharing. Gemstone consultation Coimbatore | Kalpana Srikaanth astrologer
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