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Aquamarine Gemstone Beads

Aquamarine is a treasure from the mineral family of beryl. Known for its captivating range of blue tones, from the lightest sky to a deeper sea blue, its color is mainly due to iron oxides within the crystal structure. Aquamarine is typically found in granite rocks and has a hardness of 7.5-8 on the Mohs scale, making it an excellent choice for jewelry due to its durability and resistance to scratching. Our collection also offers aquamarine gemstone beads wholesale for customers seeking high-quality bulk options.

Facts: Aquamarine has been cherished throughout history for its stunning oceanic hues. It was believed by ancient sailors to be the treasure of mermaids, used as a talisman for good luck and protection on voyages. This gemstone was also favored in royal collections across Europe and Asia, featured prominently in the crowns and jewelry of kings and queens, symbolizing purity and new beginnings.

Metaphysical / Holistic: Natural aquamarine gemstone beads are known to soothe and calm the emotions, making it ideal for meditation and stress relief. It is also said to enhance clear communication, empowering you to speak your truth with clarity and confidence.

Wholesale Aquamarine Gemstone Beads for Jewelry Makers

Aquamarine 10mm Faceted Energy Prism - 15-16 Inch

Original price $36.00 - Original price $36.00
Original price $36.00
$36.00 - $36.00
Current price $36.00
Login for wholesale

Aquamarine is a transparent to translucent stone ranging from cerulean blue to light blue in higher grades. In lower grades it can be transparent t...

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Original price $36.00 - Original price $36.00
Original price $36.00
$36.00 - $36.00
Current price $36.00
Login for wholesale

About this stone

Color
Light BlueSky BlueVivid BlueGreenish-Blue (Santa Maria color)
Origin
BrazilMozambiqueMadagascarNigeriaPakistan
Mohs hardness
7.5–8
Treatment categories
HeatedNatural
Industry-standard treatment
Heat treatment
Mineral chemistry
Beryllium aluminum silicate (beryl)
Crystal system
Hexagonal
Stone family
Beryl
Birthstone
March
Common cuts
Faceted RondelleMicrofaceted RoundSmooth Round
Common sizes
2mm3mm4mm6mm
Care notes
Durable (Mohs 7.5–8). Ultrasonic and steam generally safe for clean material; avoid for fracture-filled strands.
Related stones
Emerald, Morganite, Tourmaline

Frequently asked questions

  • Is your aquamarine natural or heat-treated?
    The vast majority of aquamarine on the global market is heat-treated to convert greenish rough to pure blue. The treatment is permanent, stable, and industry-universal. Heated strands should be labeled; untreated strands carry their own label when source material is known. Ask before buying if the page doesn't specify treatment.
  • Is heat-treated aquamarine still real aquamarine?
    Yes. Heat treatment changes the color of the rough but doesn't change what the stone is — it's still beryl. The treatment is the global industry default and has been since the early 20th century. Disclosure is the trade standard; treatment should be disclosed — ask if a strand doesn't specify.
  • What does "Santa Maria color" mean?
    It's the trade's name for the deepest, purest, most saturated blue tier on the aquamarine color scale — originally describing material from the Santa Maria de Itabira mine in Brazil. That mine is essentially exhausted; today, "Santa Maria color" is applied to any aquamarine that meets the same color benchmark, regardless of origin. Most current Santa Maria-color material is from Mozambique, Madagascar, Nigeria, or Pakistan.
  • What's the difference between aquamarine and blue topaz?
    They're different stones. Aquamarine is beryl (Mohs 7.5–8), with a softer, sometimes slightly greenish blue. Blue topaz is topaz (Mohs 8), almost always irradiated and heated colorless topaz, with a more saturated and often brighter blue. Blue topaz is significantly more abundant in supply than aquamarine. The two are not interchangeable, and "blue topaz" sold as aquamarine (or vice versa) is a labeling problem — mineral identity should be disclosed, so confirm if a listing doesn't specify.
  • Why is aquamarine usually faceted instead of smooth?
    Aquamarine's value comes from clarity and color, both of which are amplified by faceting. Smooth-polished aquamarine is uncommon at trade scale — the stone reads dull compared to faceted material of the same grade. Most bead-format aquamarine is microfaceted (small precision facets at 2.5–4mm) or faceted rondelle / round.