Beryl (Morganite) 8x10-10x12mm Rough Nugget A Grade - 15-16 Inch
Original price
$27.00
-
Original price
$27.00
Original price
$27.00
$27.00
-
$27.00
A relatively rare silicate mineral found in igneous and metamorphic rocks around the world, Beryl is generally clear, while its variations in color are better known by other names: Emerald (green), Heliodor (yellow), Aquamarine (blue), Morganite (pink), Golden Beryl and Red Beryl. The word "beryl" is derived from the Greek beryllos, which refers to a "precious blue-green color-of-sea-water stone." Our Beryl strands include a number of examples of the varieties, including Aquamarine and Morganite.
SKU BERY8-12NUG-RG-A
Specifications
Stone type
Beryl
Cut
Pebble & nugget
Strand length
15-16 Inch
Drill style
Drilled (irregular axis)
Grade
A Grade
Typical origin
BrazilMadagascarAfghanistanPakistanRussia
Mohs hardness
7.5–8
Care
Durable (Mohs 7.5–8). Mild soap and soft cloth; ultrasonic generally safe for untreated stones.
Mineral family
Beryl
Frequently asked questions
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What varieties of beryl might I find on a strand labeled simply 'beryl'?
Beryl is a mineral family that includes aquamarine (blue), emerald (green, chromium/vanadium colored), morganite (pink), heliodor (yellow), goshenite (colorless), and red beryl. Strands sold as 'beryl' without a varietal name are usually mixed-color or pale material that doesn't meet the saturation threshold for a varietal trade name — often a soft mix of greens, blues, yellows, and pinks from the same deposits that yield the named varieties. If you need a specific color, look for the varietal name or ask before ordering. -
Is beryl typically treated, and how should that affect my project planning?
Heat treatment is common in the beryl family, particularly for aquamarine (to drive greenish tones toward pure blue) and some morganite. Heat is stable and permanent — it doesn't fade with normal wear, light exposure, or cleaning. Emerald is more often oiled or resin-filled to mask fractures, which is a different conversation and requires gentler care. Untreated and heated beryl both wear the same in finished jewelry. Treatment should be listed; ask before buying if it isn't specified, especially if you're marketing the piece as untreated. -
Is beryl durable enough for rings and bracelets, or should I stick to earrings and necklaces?
At Mohs 7.5–8, beryl is durable enough for daily-wear jewelry including rings and bracelets, with one caveat: beryl has distinct cleavage and can chip on a sharp impact even though it resists scratching well. For strung bead jewelry the cleavage rarely matters — beads aren't taking direct blows. Faceted beryl in a ring bezel is fine; a prong-set faceted bead in a high-impact position is where you'd want to think twice. Emerald is the exception in the family — its typical fracture-filling makes it less ring-friendly than its hardness suggests. -
How do I clean finished pieces strung with beryl beads?
Warm water, mild soap, and a soft cloth or soft brush handle routine cleaning on untreated and heat-treated beryl. Ultrasonic cleaners are generally safe for those, but avoid them on emerald or any beryl that's been fracture-filled or oiled — the vibration can drive out filler and expose cleavage planes. Steam cleaning carries the same risk. Store beryl separately from harder stones (topaz, corundum, diamond) to prevent surface scuffing, and keep it away from prolonged heat or harsh solvents. -
What does beryl pair well with in mixed-stone designs?
Pale beryl mixes — soft aqua, mint, peach, and yellow tones — work beautifully alongside other pastel stones at similar saturation: rose quartz, prehnite, chalcedony, peach moonstone, and pale amethyst. The slight glassy translucency of beryl reads well against opaque stones like turquoise or chrysoprase for contrast. For metals, both yellow gold and rose gold flatter the warmer beryls (heliodor, morganite, peach), while sterling and white gold suit the blues and greens. Smaller calibrated rounds (4–6mm) layer well; 8–10mm beads carry a design on their own as a focal.