Looks like you've located a small exposed pegmatite outcrop, beryl is almost always a by-product of feldspar and mica mining. Better well known for bein the
gem stones emerald and aquamarine. Trace elements chromium and vanadium cause the green to blueish green coloring and all can be faceted, even the smallest
crystals, it has a hardness of 8. No major or large deposits have ever been found but a single 220 ton crystal was discovered in Brazil some years ago as well as
another large 19 ft. X5 ft. crystal in S. Dakota. The other variations are morganite, Goshenite, and Heliodor but are all the same chemically (Be3Al3Si6O18 ).
If'n you pile enough of it up you can get paid for it, it does have decent value. Very cool!
Yep we are just at the top of the dyke and working our way down we have been working this site for about 2 years and have pulled around 6lbs of beryl with only around 100kts faccetable the rest has been specimin only thanks for the write up
I can add to Rockhunter1620 list of US beryl finds. New Mexico listed a number of counties that had produced the mineral. One in particular was a new record in June 1955 at the Rocking Horse Mine in Santa Fe county. It measured 5 feet long and 9-10 inches in diameter. Source: Northrop UNM Press
Several different colors of Beryl can be found just outside of Burnsville, NC at an old Mica Mine in the National Forest! A 25 pound Aquamarine specimen found there in the 1950's by one of the workers in the mine holes, now resides in the Smithsonian and is said to be the largest specimen ever found in North America. I knew the gentleman that found it as I used to Gem prospect the mine and he lived beside the entrance. He was a drinker and told me that he sold the specimen for two bottles of liquor and 25 dollars. He passed away I believe in 1998 and I have not been back to the mine since. I really loved sitting on his' porch with him and talk about the mine and other things! He lost a brother in an accident at another Mica Mine just across the mountain from this mine and no Beryl was ever found at it.
There is no "set" price. It's a matter of negotiation.
However, specimens prices are based on condition (damage etc) and aesthetic properties as well as rarity and locale where it was mined. Some mines only produced so and so many - equals higher price.
While facet grade prices are more a matter of colour, clarity and size/weight. Of course what material and rarity matters to.
There is a kind of "market price" for facet grade material.
RH, those look quite neat. Do you know if it is Aquamarine or green beryl?
Where would I find a market for beryl? We have a bunch of it in a mine I am working on a friends property. There is a lot of it in the old tailings pile,,we could walk the excavator down there a look around a little,,but,,we would need a market. Any suggestions would be appricated
I would suggest a trip to a local gem and mineral show.
If there isn't a buyer there then the other vendors should be able to give you some leads on who buys what in your area.
Tuscon gem and mineral show is the biggest. People buying and selling all over town.