The Earth's Atlas — Crystals by Origin | Interactive Map

◈ ◊ ◈

From the Earth to Your Home

The Earth's Atlas

For thousands of years, humans have been drawn to crystals as currency, medicine, sacred tools, and objects of beauty. We source from 20 countries across 6 continents. Explore where your crystals come from.

20Countries
6Continents
1,200+Specimens

Click a pin to explore

Brazil Peru Uruguay Bolivia Argentina Mexico USA Canada Morocco Congo S. Africa Madagascar India Afghanistan Pakistan China Indonesia Russia Spain Australia

Hover over pins to learn more · Click to shop by origin

◢ ◣ ◤ ◥ ◢ ◣ ◤ ◥ ◢ ◣ ◤ ◥

South America

◆ The Crystal Heartland

South America produces more crystals than any other continent. Brazil alone accounts for 35% of the world's colored gemstones. From the volcanic basalt geodes of Uruguay to Bolivia's singular ametrine deposits, this continent is the beating heart of the crystal world.

🇧🇷

Brazil

Minas Gerais · Bahia · Rio Grande do Sul

369

The world's largest producer of colored gemstones. Minas Gerais alone yields more mineral variety than most entire countries, from cathedral-sized amethyst geodes to imperial topaz found nowhere else on Earth.

𝄨 Portuguese colonists discovered Brazil's gem wealth in the 1700s. The Ouro Preto mines sparked a rush that shaped the nation's economy for centuries.

AmethystCitrineRose QuartzTourmalineAgate
Shop Brazil →
🇵🇪

Peru

Huancavelica · Ancash · Pasco

95

The Andes create mineral-rich hydrothermal veins at extreme elevations. Peru produces pyrite specimens with mirror-like faces and vivid pink rhodochrosite from ancient copper mines.

𝄨 The Inca considered quartz sacred, believing it held the power of light. Pyrite mirrors were used in divination ceremonies to communicate with the spirit world.

PyriteRhodochrositeQuartz
Shop Peru →
🇺🇾

Uruguay

Artigas · Salto · Rivera

77

Artigas produces the world's deepest-purple amethyst geodes, formed 130 million years ago in volcanic basalt flows. Some geodes reach several meters tall with exceptional color saturation.

𝄨 Uruguay and Brazil share the same Parana Basin volcanic geology. Commercial mining began in the 1850s, and the region remains the gold standard for deep purple amethyst.

Amethyst GeodesAgateChalcedony
Shop Uruguay →
🇧🇴

Bolivia

Anahi Mine · Santa Cruz

19

The world's only commercial source of ametrine, a natural amethyst-citrine fusion. Different iron oxidation states within a single crystal create the distinctive purple-gold split.

𝄨 Legend says the Anahi Mine was a wedding gift from a Bolivian princess to a Spanish conquistador in the 1600s. The mine was lost for centuries before rediscovery in the 1960s.

AmetrineAmethystVivianite
Shop Bolivia →
🇦🇷

Argentina

Catamarca · San Luis · Cordoba

14

Argentina's national gemstone is rhodochrosite. The Capillitas mine produces banded rhodochrosite stalactites that are among the most prized collector specimens in the mineral world.

𝄨 The Inca called rhodochrosite "Inca Rose" and believed it was the blood of their former rulers turned to stone. Argentina declared it the national stone in 2014.

RhodochrositeQuartzAgate
Shop Argentina →
☥ ☆ ☥ ☆ ☥

North America

◆ Ancient Traditions, Modern Mines

From Arkansas quartz caverns to Mexico's legendary Crystal Cave, North America blends ancient indigenous crystal traditions with modern mining innovation. Native Americans have used turquoise and quartz ceremonially for over 2,000 years.

🇲🇽

Mexico

Chihuahua · Durango · Guerrero

68

Home to the Cave of Crystals in Naica, Chihuahua, containing selenite beams up to 12 meters long. The cave is 50°C with 90% humidity, making human visits limited to minutes.

𝄨 The Aztec god Tezcatlipoca, "Smoking Mirror," was named after obsidian. Aztec priests used polished obsidian mirrors to contact the spirit world and predict the future.

FluoriteFire OpalDanburiteSelenite
Shop Mexico →
🇺🇸

United States

Arkansas · Oregon · California · Arizona

34

Arkansas produces more natural quartz than any U.S. state. Oregon's sunstone is one of only two gem-quality feldspars commercially mined in the world.

𝄨 Native Americans have used turquoise for 2,000+ years. Apache warriors believed turquoise improved a hunter's aim. Cherokee tradition holds that quartz crystals are homes of powerful spirits.

Clear QuartzSunstoneTourmalineTurquoise
Shop USA →
🇨🇦

Canada

Labrador · Thunder Bay · Alberta

3

Labradorite was first identified on the coast of Labrador in 1770. Alberta's Bearpaw Formation yields ammolite, an iridescent fossil gemstone found in only one place on Earth.

𝄨 Inuit legend says a warrior struck labradorite with his spear, releasing the Aurora Borealis into the sky. Some light remained trapped in the stone, giving it its spectral flash.

LabradoriteAmmoliteAmethyst
Shop Canada →
☽ ✶ ☼ ✶ ☽

Africa

◆ The Ancient Continent

Africa contains some of the oldest geology on Earth, with the Kaapvaal Craton dating back 3.6 billion years. From Madagascar's island treasures to Morocco's Atlas Mountain specimens, African crystals carry the deep memory of our planet's earliest formations.

🇲🇬

Madagascar

Antsirabe · Ambatondrazaka

84

Separated from the African continent 88 million years ago, Madagascar evolved unique pegmatite deposits. The island shares mineral DNA with India, its geological twin before the continental split.

𝄨 Malagasy people have used crystals in ancestral ceremonies for centuries. European geologists arrived in the 1800s and were stunned by mineral diversity rivaling entire continents.

LabradoriteRose QuartzCelestiteSeptarian
Shop Madagascar →
🇲🇦

Morocco

Midelt · Errachidia · Ouarzazate

66

The Atlas Mountains and eastern desert yield dramatic mineral specimens. Ancient seabeds reveal pristine geodes, while lead-zinc deposits produce the world's most vibrant vanadinite crystals.

𝄨 Berber and Arab traders carried Moroccan minerals along Saharan trade routes for over 1,000 years. The same caravan paths that moved spices and gold also transported crystals across North Africa.

VanadiniteAzuriteGeodesSelenite
Shop Morocco →
🇿🇦

South Africa

Northern Cape · Limpopo · Mpumalanga

58

South Africa sits on the Kaapvaal Craton, 3.6 billion years old and among Earth's most ancient geology. The Northern Cape produces the world's finest tiger's eye.

𝄨 The Mapungubwe kingdom (1075-1220 CE) traded gold and gemstones across southern Africa. The 1860s diamond rush at Kimberley forever changed the region's relationship with minerals.

Tiger's EyePrehniteJasperSugilite
Shop South Africa →
🇨🇩

Congo

Katanga · Kolwezi · Lubumbashi

11

The Katanga Copper Belt produces some of the world's most vivid green and blue copper-bearing minerals. Malachite from this region forms in distinctive banded patterns prized by collectors.

𝄨 Ancient Egyptians imported Congolese malachite to grind into green pigment for eye paint. The mineral was associated with the goddess Hathor and believed to protect against evil.

MalachiteChrysocollaDioptase
Shop Congo →
☞ ♦ ♣ ♦ ☜

Asia

◆ Where It All Began

Asia holds the world's oldest continuous crystal traditions. Vedic texts describe sacred gems 3,500 years ago. Chinese civilization has revered jade for 8,000 years. The Silk Road carried Afghan lapis lazuli to pharaohs and Renaissance painters alike. These are the origin lands of crystal wisdom.

🇮🇳

India

Jaipur · Kerala · Maharashtra

46

5,000 years of continuous gemstone trade. The Deccan Plateau's volcanic basalt produces world-class zeolites and agates. Kerala's coastal deposits yield rainbow moonstone with blue adularescence.

𝄨 The Vedas (1500 BCE) describe the Navaratna: nine sacred gems linked to planetary bodies. India's Golconda mines were the world's only diamond source for 2,000 years, producing the Hope Diamond and Koh-i-Noor.

MoonstoneAmethystAgateApophyllite
Shop India →
🇦🇫

Afghanistan

Badakhshan · Nuristan · Panjshir

13

The Sar-e-Sang mines in Badakhshan have produced the world's finest lapis lazuli continuously for over 6,000 years. These are the oldest continuously worked mines on Earth.

𝄨 Afghan lapis colored Tutankhamun's death mask (1323 BCE), was ground into ultramarine for Vermeer's paintings, and appears in the Standard of Ur from 2600 BCE. In antiquity, it was worth more than gold.

Lapis LazuliTourmalineKunziteEmerald
Shop Afghanistan →
🇵🇰

Pakistan

Gilgit-Baltistan · Swat Valley

10

The collision of Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates created the Himalayas and some of Earth's most spectacular mineral deposits. Northern mountains yield gem-quality aquamarine and tourmaline at extreme altitude.

𝄨 The Swat Valley was known to Alexander the Great's armies (327 BCE) as a source of fine emeralds. Pakistan's gem mining tradition spans 2,500 years along the ancient Silk Road.

AquamarineTourmalineKunziteFluorite
Shop Pakistan →
🇨🇳

China

Hunan · Fujian · Inner Mongolia

7

Vast geology spanning nearly every mineral environment on Earth. Hunan province produces fluorite of exceptional color, while Inner Mongolia yields distinctive smoky quartz.

𝄨 Chinese civilization has revered jade for 8,000 years. Confucius wrote that jade embodies 11 virtues. The character for "king" (王) originally depicted three jade discs strung on a cord.

FluoriteQuartzTourmalineJade
Shop China →
🇮🇩

Indonesia

Java · Sumatra · Sulawesi

7

Ring of Fire volcanic geology creates specimens through intense heat and mineral-rich waters. The archipelago yields ancient petrified wood with extraordinary preservation and vibrant agates.

𝄨 Ancient Javanese kingdoms used volcanic stones in royal regalia. The Majapahit Empire (1293-1527) believed crystals from volcanic regions held the concentrated power of earth spirits.

Petrified WoodAgateJasper
Shop Indonesia →
✸ ✿ ❀ ✿ ✸

Europe

◆ Imperial Collections & Natural Geometry

European mineral traditions shaped modern geology and gemology. From the Ural Mountains that straddle two continents to Spain's geometrically perfect pyrite, European specimens represent centuries of scientific discovery and royal patronage.

🇷🇺

Russia

Ural Mountains · Siberia · Karelia

30

The Ural Mountains yield charoite (found nowhere else on Earth) and premium shungite from Karelia's 2-billion-year-old deposits. Alexandrite was first discovered here in 1830.

𝄨 Catherine the Great amassed one of history's most valuable gem collections. Czar Peter the Great founded Russia's first mineral cabinet in 1716. The Urals supplied Europe's elite with malachite columns for the Winter Palace.

CharoiteShungiteAmazonite
Shop Russia →
🇪🇸

Spain

Navajun · Almeria · Asturias

15

The Navajun mine produces the world's most perfectly cubic pyrite crystals, naturally formed with mirror-flat faces and precise 90-degree angles that look machine-cut.

𝄨 Ancient Romans called pyrite "fire stone" and used Spanish specimens to spark fires. Medieval alchemists believed pyrite contained gold, fueling centuries of transmutation experiments across Europe.

PyriteQuartzFluorite
Shop Spain →
★ ☃ ☀ ☃ ★

Oceania

◆ 60,000 Years of Dreamtime

Australia is home to both the oldest continuous human culture and some of Earth's most ancient geology. Aboriginal Australians have used crystals ceremonially for 60,000+ years. The continent produces 90% of the world's precious opal.

◢◣ ◤◥ ◢◣ ◤◥

Crystals Through the Ages

Humans have revered crystals since before recorded history

~100,000 BCE

Earliest evidence of humans collecting ochre and quartz crystals in South Africa's Blombos Cave. These are among the first known objects collected purely for beauty and symbolic meaning.

~4000 BCE

Sumerians record crystal magic on cuneiform tablets. Lapis lazuli, carnelian, and hematite become standard ingredients in protective amulets and healing rituals.

~3100 BCE

Ancient Egypt. Pharaohs are buried with quartz on the forehead. Cleopatra wears crushed lapis lazuli as eyeshadow. Turquoise, malachite, and carnelian symbolize protection in the afterlife.

~2000 BCE

Chinese Medicine incorporates crystals into healing. Jade acupuncture needles. The word for jade, "yu," also means precious and beautiful.

~400 BCE

Ancient Greece. "Krystallos" means ice. Greeks believed clear quartz was water frozen so deeply it could never thaw. "Amethystos" means "not intoxicated."

77 CE

Pliny the Elder catalogs hundreds of minerals in his 37-volume Natural History, the first systematic mineral reference. Renaissance scholars would rely on it 1,400 years later.

~1150 CE

Hildegard von Bingen, German mystic and polymath, documents the healing properties of 26 stones. Her crystal therapeutics represent the peak of medieval European mineral wisdom.

TODAY

The Crystal Renaissance. Modern collectors blend ancient wisdom with geological science. Over 5,800 mineral species identified. Crystals.com sources from 20 countries to bring the earth's finest specimens to your home.

◢◣ ◤◥ ◢◣ ◤◥

Did You Know?

The oldest mineral on Earth is a 4.4-billion-year-old zircon crystal found in Western Australia. The Earth itself is only 4.54 billion years old.

Quartz powers every digital watch. Piezoelectricity, the property of generating voltage under pressure, was discovered in quartz in 1880 by the Curie brothers.

Obsidian fractures sharper than surgical steel. Obsidian blades have edges measured at 3 nanometers, 500x thinner than the sharpest steel scalpel. Some modern surgeons still use them.

Lapis lazuli was worth more than gold in antiquity. Renaissance painters ground it into ultramarine pigment at $25,000/lb in today's money. Only the Virgin Mary's robes merited the color.

Moldavite formed 15 million years ago from a meteorite impact in what is now Germany. The heat fused terrestrial and cosmic materials into a green tektite found only in the Czech Republic.

There are 5,800+ known mineral species on Earth, but only about 100 are common. New minerals are still being discovered at a rate of roughly 100 per year.

Diamonds are just carbon atoms arranged in a crystal lattice under extreme pressure. Graphite in your pencil is made of the same element, just a different atomic arrangement.

Quartz makes up 12% of Earth's crust. It is the second most abundant mineral on our planet's surface, after feldspar. Nearly every ancient culture developed a relationship with it independently.

Cleopatra's emerald mines were lost for 1,600 years. Egypt's mines near the Red Sea, worked since 1500 BCE, were only rediscovered by a French explorer in 1818.

Sourced With Care, Shipped With Love

Every crystal is hand-selected at gem shows in Tucson, Denver, and Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines. We buy directly from miners and first-hand dealers. Orders over $150 ship free within the US.

🌎

20 Countries

6 continents sourced

📦

Free Shipping

On orders over $150

Direct Sourcing

No middlemen, ever

🔎

100% Traceable

Origin documented

New Arrivals by Origin

Be the first to know when specimens arrive from your favorite regions.