Fairy Stone / Fairy Cross / Staurolite
"LOCALITIES:" Fairy Stone State Park, Virginia, USA; North Georgia, USA; Little Falls, Minnesota, USA; Taos, New Mexico, USA; Switzerland; Russia; Australia; Brazil; France; Italy; Scotland.
"DESCRIPTION:" Popular to its folklore and legends, this stone has a State Park in Virginia named after it as it is home to its namesake "fairy stones". It is also the official stone of the state of Georgia in the USA. Most commonly shaped like Celtic crosses or the St. Andrew's cross, as an "X" or as a "T" shaped Roman cross, and square Maltese crosses. Color of the Staurolite varies to the region it comes from but can be dark brow, brownish black, grey, or reddish brown.
"GEOLOGY:"Staurolite are a combination of silica, iron, and aluminum. A silicate mineral, with the Chemical formula of Fe2+2Al9O6(SiO4)4(O,OH)2, and a Strunz classification of 9.AF.30, possessing a monclinic prismatic crystal symmetry. It's H-M symbol is (2/m), with a Space group of C 2/m, and a unit cell a = 7.86 A, b = 16.6 A, c = 5.65 A; = 90.45^0; Z=2. Coloring ranges from yellowish brown, rarely blue, dark reddish brown to blackish brown, pale golden yellow in thin sections with a subvitreous to resinous luster, white to gray streaks, transparent to opague diaphaneity. Specific gravity is 3.74 - 3.83 meas. 3.686 calc. Twinning is commonly as 60^0 twins, less common as 90^0 cruciform twins. Subconchoidal fracture, brittle tenacity, mosh scale hardness of 7-7.5. Common to have penetration twinning, or a characteristic cross-shape. It occurs with almandine garnet, micas, kyanite; as well as albite, biotite, and sillimanite in gneiss and schist of regional metamorphic rocks. It is only found in rocks once subjected to great heat and pressure. A rare mineral occurence in nature, it is only found in certain areas of the world in the fairy cross or celtic cross shapes. Each are unique and never are identical. True Staurolite crosses are hard enough to scratch glass.
"FOLKLORE:" Named after the Greek word "Stauros" for "cross", they are commonly known as "fairy stones" or "fairy crosses". According to European and Christianity influenced Native American legend on the state park website, "hundreds of years before Chief Powhatan's reign, the fairies were dancing around a magical spring of water, playing with naiads and wood nymphs, when a elfin messenger arrived from a city far away bringing the news of the death of Christ. When these creatures of the forest heard the story of the crucifixion, they wept, as their tears fell upon the earth they crystallized into beautiful crosses". During the first meeting of John Smith and Pocahontas, it is said the Indian princess gave John Smith a good luck charm made out of a "fairy cross". Legend has it that Richard the Lionheart used them during the crusades to heal the wounded. Some say these are the tears of the Cherokee who wept over the loss of their homeland during the exodus on the "Trail of Tears". Others talk of an ancient race of mountain faeries who were dancing at their favorite meeting places, and upon finding out that the "Great Creator" had died, shed tears, so moved, were crushed in heart and cried, as they wept their tears crystallized into the "fairy crosses". Others say that during the defeat of the Tuatha de Danann and other faerie races when they were forced under-ground to live in the hills, the faeries around the world shed tears, made of Iron to represent the Iron Age destroying their race, in the shapes of crosses as an omen of the peopling that would destroy the planet next.
Ay the charms of the fairy stone make you blessed
through the days of labor and nights of rest
Where ever you stay, where ever you go,
May the beautiful flowers of the good Fairies Grow. ~ Little Falls Minnesota web page
Well known that Presidents Theodore Roosevelt, Wilson, Thomas A. Edison, Colonel Charles Lindbergh, and other prominent people carried one of these on their person(s).
"MAGICAL USES:" For centuries these were believed to protect the wearer from sickness, accidents, disaster, and witchcraft. Used to find lost objects. Placed under the pillow to help induce lucid dreaming and astral travel. Used as amulets for good luck. Used to aid stress, anxiety, fear, considered soothing energy, and helpful with grounding. Many believe they embody an energy that will help you make contact with faeries or nature spirits. Some believe wearing the stones will help one stop smoking. Astrologically associated with Pisces. Associated with the base chakra. Healing qualities, good luck, rituals, protection, fever, defeat of malaria, stress, depression, addictive personality traits, time management, smoking cessation.
By Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions and Research Facility.
BIBLIOGRAPHY/REFERENCES/RECOMMENDED READING:
* Crystal Healer: Staurolite Fairy Cross Crystal. Website referenced August 2012. http://www.thecrystalhealer.co.uk/Staurolite-fairy-cross-crystal
* Environmental Graffitti: Staurolite Truth or Legend. Website referenced August 2012. http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/nature/news-fairy-cross-truth-or-legend
* Fairy Stone State Park Website. Website referenced August 2012. http://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state parks/fai.shtml.
* Healing Crystals for You: Staurolite. Website referenced August 2012. http://www.healing-crystals-for-you.com/staurolite.html
* Little Falls Minnesota: Cross Rocks. Website reference August 2012. http://www.littlefallsmn.com/CrossRocks.php
* Shaman's Crystal: Staurolite Fairy Cross. Website reference August 2012. http://www.shamanscrystal.co.uk/crystal/495/staurolite-fairy-cross/
* Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia Staurolite. Website referenced August 2012. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staurolite
Medium sized Fairy Crosses