When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: blue green tourmaline healing properties wish

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tourmaline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourmaline

    The new type of tourmaline, which soon became known as paraiba tourmaline, came in blue and green. Brazilian paraiba tourmaline usually contains abundant inclusions. Much of the paraiba tourmaline from Brazil does not actually come from Paraíba, but the neighboring state of Rio Grande do Norte. Material from Rio Grande do Norte is often ...

  3. Elbaite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elbaite

    Light blue to bluish green: Brazilian indicolite variety (from indigo) Green: Brazilian verdelite variety (from emerald) Watermelon tourmaline is a zoned variety with a reddish center surrounded by a green outer zone resembling watermelon rind, evident in cross-sectional slices of prisms, often displaying curved sides.

  4. Beryl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beryl

    The deep blue version of aquamarine is called maxixe [19] (pronounced mah-she-she). [20] Its color results from a radiation-induced color center. [21] Faceted aquamarine. The pale blue color of aquamarine is attributed to Fe 2+. Fe 3+ ions produce golden-yellow color, and when both Fe 2+ and Fe 3+ are present, the color is a darker blue as in ...

  5. Prasiolite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prasiolite

    Prasiolite (also known as green quartz, green amethyst or vermarine) is a green variety of quartz. Since 1950, almost all natural prasiolite has come from a small Brazilian mine, [citation needed] but it has also been mined in the Lower Silesia region of Poland. Naturally occurring prasiolite has also been found in the Thunder Bay area of ...

  6. Aquamarine (gem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquamarine_(gem)

    Aquamarine is a pale-blue to light-green variety of the beryl family, [2] with its name relating to water and sea. [3] The color of aquamarine can be changed by heat, with a goal to enhance its physical appearance (though this practice is frowned upon by collectors and jewelers). [4]

  7. List of plants with symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_plants_with_symbolism

    Youthful beauty and winning grace, [6] rejected love (in Switzerland), "glory of spring," heartsickness and the death of young maidens; [11] rusticity, healing, pensiveness [5] [4] Creeping Willow Love forsaken

  8. List of mythological objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mythological_objects

    Ausadhirdipyamanas, healing plants used for healing and rejuvenations in battles. These are used by Ashvins. (Hindu mythology) Haoma, the Avestan language name of a plant and its divinity, both of which play a role in Zoroastrian doctrine and in later Persian culture and mythology.

  9. World tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_tree

    This tree is described as having all-healing properties and many seeds. [66] In another account, the tree is the very same tree of the White Hōm (Haōma). [ 67 ] Gaokerena or white Haoma is a tree whose vivacity ensures continued life in the universe, [ 68 ] and grants immortality to "all who eat from it".