Talisman Black Agate & Black Tourmaline Unisex Beaded Necklace
Incredible Talisman!
Black agate is an energy excellent Talisman for Sun Signs Aries, Gemini, Scorpio and Capricorn.
Black Agate is deeply hypnotic with its naural swirls offering protection and grounding of the energies in the earth body. Its energy is of protection and I've included an Agate 'eye' at the top to keep watch and ward away unwelcome energies. The Black agate itself is small but intricate. It reminds me of the storm on Jupiter. It has a tiny crystal seam of microgranular Quartz (called Quartzine) and you'll need a magnifying glass to see it, though once you see it, you'll be in awe.
Paired with Black Brazillian Tourmaline, this is a Talisman of serious protective qualities and strength, helping you endure and stay grounded. The word I heard when creating was 'fortitude.'
Unisex.
Measurements
9.5 cms or almost 4 inches
Necklace is a mix of Black agate beads and 6mm Brazillian Tourmaline beads measuring 51cms or 20 inches with bronze toggle closure.
Mineralogy & Crystallography Black Tourmaline
Tourmaline Crystal System is Hexagonal ~ The hexagonal system is a crystal system of Atoms which the unit cell is a right prism on a lozenge-shaped base. A combination of three of these unit cells forms a hexagonal prism.
Schorl is best known as "Black Tourmaline". Chemical content is sodium iron aluminum boro-silicate.
Schorl is the most common form of Tourmaline and is one of the most aesthetic black minerals known. Although other forms of Tourmaline may be black, Schorl is exclusively black and, unlike other Tourmaline forms, is never transparent or even translucent.
Black Tourmaline is strongly Pyroelectric, meaning that it has the capacity to generate an electrical charge during a temperature change. This is why it is the most widely used crystal for protection against EMF and for warding away negative energy entities.
Mineralogy & Crystallography Agate
An agate crystal forms within the cavities of other rocks in acidic to neutral environments. Its formation occurs by the accumulation of silica-rich groundwater in rock voids, over thousands of years. In fact, these chalcedony veins mostly develop within the voids of volcanic igneous rocks and plutonic igneous rocks.
Agates are most commonly found as nodules within the cavities of volcanic rocks such as basalt, andesite, and rhyolite. These cavities, called vesicles (amygdaloids when filled), are gas bubbles that were trapped inside the lava when it cooled.