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Australian Chrysoprase 6mm Round - 15-16 Inch

Original price $22.00 - Original price $22.00
Original price $22.00
$22.00 - $22.00
Current price $22.00
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Chrysoprase is a bright apple green, translucent stone, whose color often caused ancient jewelers to confuse it with Emerald. A cryptocrystalline Chalcedony, its brilliant color comes from the presence of very small inclusions of Nickel compounds, as opposed to the presence of Chromium which creates Emerald’s green color. Chrysoprase is believed to balance the heart chakra and help one understand their needs and emotions.

SKU CRP6RD

Specifications

Stone type
Chalcedony
Cut
Round
Bead size
6mm
Strand length
15-16 Inch
Approx. beads per strand
60
Drill style
Center-drilled
Treatment
Natural
Typical origin
AustraliaTanzaniaIndonesiaBrazil
Mohs hardness
6.5–7
Care
Durable (Mohs 6.5–7). Mild soap and soft cloth; color can fade slightly with prolonged sun exposure.
Mineral family
Chalcedony

Frequently asked questions

  • Is chrysoprase a natural color, or is it dyed?
    Chrysoprase gets its apple-green to deep mint color from trace nickel within the chalcedony structure — it is a naturally colored stone, not dyed. Because the color is intrinsic, it reads evenly through the bead rather than sitting on the surface the way dye does on lower-grade green chalcedony. Color saturation varies by deposit: Australian material tends toward a richer green, while Tanzanian and Indonesian sources can run lighter or more yellow-green. Treatment status should be disclosed — if it isn't specified, ask before buying. Dakota carries chrysoprase from Australia, Tanzania, Indonesia, and Brazil.
  • How do I tell chrysoprase from dyed green chalcedony or aventurine?
    Chrysoprase, dyed green chalcedony, and green aventurine all show up in the bead trade and get mixed up regularly. Chrysoprase is a translucent-to-semi-translucent chalcedony with even nickel-derived color throughout the bead. Dyed green chalcedony often shows color concentrated in fractures or drill holes and may sit at a brighter, more uniform hue than natural material. Aventurine is a quartzite — opaque, with visible fuchsite mica inclusions that flash under light, and a granular rather than waxy luster. Prase is a leek-green quartz that lacks chrysoprase's translucency. Hand lens and a strong light source usually settle it quickly.
  • Will chrysoprase fade over time?
    Chrysoprase can lose some color saturation under prolonged direct sunlight or sustained heat — this is documented for the variety and tied to the nickel coloration and its water content within the chalcedony. For finished jewelry, store pieces out of direct sun when not worn and avoid leaving them in hot cars or sunny windows. Normal indoor wear and ambient light are not a concern. Rehydration in water is sometimes cited as restoring color in faded material, with mixed results. Clean with mild soap and a soft cloth; skip ultrasonic and steam cleaners.
  • What jewelry projects suit chrysoprase best?
    At Mohs 6.5–7, chrysoprase handles the same wear contexts as other chalcedonies and quartzes — well-suited to earrings, necklaces, bracelets, and pendants, with rings best reserved for protective settings or occasional wear. The smaller sizes Dakota stocks (2mm, 3mm, 4mm rounds and microfaceted rounds) work for delicate stranded designs, multi-strand layering, and accent placement against gold-fill or sterling. Larger 8–10mm rounds and cubes carry well as a focal stone. Chrysoprase pairs naturally with pearl, moonstone, peridot, citrine, and warm metals; the green also reads cleanly against turquoise and lapis in color-blocked designs.
  • Why does chrysoprase color and price vary so much between strands?
    Chrysoprase is graded primarily on color saturation, evenness, and translucency. Top material shows a saturated apple-to-deep-green color with strong translucency and minimal matrix; lower grades trend paler, more opaque, or carry visible brown or tan inclusions from host rock. Australian (often called Marlborough) chrysoprase has historically set the color benchmark, with Tanzanian, Indonesian, and Brazilian material filling out the range. Cut also matters — microfaceted rounds emphasize translucency and color depth, while smooth rounds and cubes read more saturated at the surface. Origin and grade should be disclosed when specified.