Quartz, var. Smoky Quartz (Sceptre)
Posted by: Raymond McDougall on 02.15.2023 | Filed under:

Quartz, var. Smoky Quartz (Sceptre)

Specimen # 102749
Mineral: Quartz, var. Smoky Quartz (Sceptre)
Location: Chibuku Mine, Chiredzi District, Masvingo, Zimbabwe
Size: 6.8 x 2.8 x 2.4 cm

Description

Detailed Description

A beautiful razor-sharp smoky quartz sceptre with a pale amethystine stem. There are small zones of amethyst in the main sceptre head but the overall colour hue is more smoky so I’ve labeled it smoky quartz. This sceptre is full of red and silvery-black hematite crystal inclusions – they look amazing under magnification, and looking at the crystal overall they add to both the colour and the internal sparkle of the piece. The crystal has good lustre and good transparency too, except that there are so many cool inclusions it looks dark. There are two two-phase inclusions with moving bubbles visible with a loupe (one at the top of the prism face on the front – as in photo 1 – and one at the top of the prism face to the left of that front face). In excellent condition, no damage. A super piece!

 


About the Chibuku Mine, Chiredzi, Masvingo, Zimbabwe

Amethyst and smoky quartz sceptres from Chiredzi have been known locally for at least two decades. Originally, the crystals were gathered by hand from surface showings by members of the people indigenous to the area, the Shangaan people. Specimen recovery efforts of this kind still take place in part of the locality, with only basic tools.

The first more involved workings at the property were developed in 2012. At the outset, the locality was one project, operated by partners. However, as seems to happen so often in such arrangements, difficulties arose. These led to the division of this locality into two separate side-by-side areas of operation. One operation is called the Shangani Mine, named after the Shangaan people. It has been worked by hand by Shangaan diggers. The other operation is named the Chibuku Mine. One of the principals running the mine has explained to me that the name refers back to the early times of local specimen recovery. At that time, the collecting work was done mostly by the women of the community, while men from the community were seen sitting about, drinking locally-brewed Chibuku beer (and not digging)… The mine name is therefore a laugh and also in that light can be seen as a tip of the cap to those hard-working early diggers whose efforts first brought these wonderful specimens out to the world. The Chibuku Mine operations are currently run by two principals, Sultan and Baba, as a professional specimen mining operation.

The Chibuku Mine was shut down during Covid and finally allowed to re-open in November 2022. Upon resumption, many local workers were hired to reopen the specimen mining operations. After a period of hand work, an excavator was brought in and mining now progresses at the Chibuku Mine with drilling and blasting to uncover pockets in the hard rock.

The Chibuku Mine and the Shangani Mine have produced substantial numbers of crystals over the years. Unfortunately, from the beginning of these crystal recovery efforts – and continuing even to the present day – most crystals have been moderately-to-badly damaged and are therefore not pieces I’d put on the website. However, the best from the 2022-2023 workings at the Chibuku Mine (represented by this lot) are better than most specimens from surface digging and hand recovery in the past – they are truly exceptional quality.


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