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TURQUOISE


Various resources selected to provide an expert background on this magical gemstone. 

1. Turquoise as a Stone of Protection
 From Afghanistan to the Zuni Pueblo, people the world over have revered Turquoise as a good luck stone for centuries. Blue as the summer sky or a robin's egg, this soft stone has inspired many mystical associations.  
 

A great deal of turquoise symbolism and lore involves predicting danger. Some believe turquoise stones can warn their owners by breaking, like malachites supposedly do. Color changes presumably warn of impending illness. In one tale, a man believed he had broken a bone. Later, he discovered his turquoise had made the cracking sound he heard. It took the injury in his place. Also like malachite, turquoise can supposedly protect from falls, most especially from horseback. Affixing this gem to a horse's bridle can protect the animal, as well. Turquoise's use as a "horse amulet" appears to be an ancient magical practice.
 

Aztec Turquoise Symbolism

The Aztecs greatly valued turquoise. The American geologist and educator W. P. Blake compiled some notable accounts of this gemstone from the Spanish conquest of Mexico during the 16th century. For example:

  • Bernal Díaz del Castillo, a Spanish conquistador and historian, observed that the Aztecs valued chalchihuitl, or turquoise, more than the Spaniards valued gold and emerald.

  • Juan de Torquemada, a Franciscan missionary, wrote that the Aztecs made offerings of this stone at the temple of the goddess Matlalcueye and buried distinguished chiefs with fragments of chalchihuitl in their mouths. When the conquistador Pedro de Alvarado and the Emperor Montezuma played games of chance. Alvarado received gold if he won but paid chalchihuitl if he lost. The Aztecs believed their god Quetzalcoatl taught them the art of cutting and polishing this stone.

  • Bernardino de Sahagún, another Franciscan missionary, wrote that Aztec chiefs wore strings of chalchihuitl around their wrists as badges of distinction.


     

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My own note on this content:  This genre of art created by the Aztecs drew me into a deep connection to learning this information. It is the reason I sought to find Turquoise. Finding my own materials, and to create art this was the goal! Enough about me I just wanted to explain my rationale for becoming obsessive finding gemstones now for nearly 2 decades in California. Back to IGS history. 

Turquoise Symbolism and the Native American Southwest

The Apache highly prized duklij, turquoise, for its talismanic properties. They carved amulets, beads, pendants, and fetishes from this material. If Apache shamans didn't possess this stone, they wouldn't receive proper recognition from their tribes. One popular belief connected turquoises and rainbows. If you could find the end of a rainbow after a storm, searching the damp earth would yield a turquoise. The Navajo used ground turquoise and coral to make sacred sand mandalas to summon rain.


Turquoise Man and Salt Woman

A Zuni legend relates the story of Turquoise Man and Salt Woman. They felt they were not valued enough, so they went away from the people. Turquoise Man said, "His flesh was simply given out to women for sexual favors." (I guess he didn't care for being used as money). The Zuni held an annual pilgrimage to retrieve salt from the sacred lake where Salt Woman hid. At Pueblo de Los Muertos, New Mexico, a sea shell coated with pitch and inset with turquoise and garnets was found. It had the form of a toad, a sacred emblem for the Z​​​​​​​​

 

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Turquoise as a Stone of Hope

People everywhere have cherished turquoise, whether used as a decorative or protective amulet, a horse protector, or rain bringer. The blue stone with the cheeriness of the sunny sky has always been foremost a symbol of hope.

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Narrated by yours truly and many good historical provided by sources to site. 
 

1. Article Provided by IGS. Source: reference to body copy here. 
https://www.gemsociety.org/article/history-legend-turquoise-gems-yore/

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Digital microscope image of a xenolithic mantle fragmentation sample, containing high-grade Turquoise. SoCAL specimen. 

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