Size of the labardoite approx. 2.8 - 3.3 cm (L - large)
Sales unit with 0.5 kg Tumbled Stones; these are approx. 30 - 35 stones.
B-quality, i.e. the usual good polish, but fewer color reflections - but at a reasonable price!
From a mineralogical point of view, dark Labradorite (dark) is a Feldspar. In gemstone healing, the mineral is used to strengthen reflection and truth as well as intuition and mediumistic gifts.
The first labradorites arrived in Europe in the 18th century after they were found on the Canadian Labrador Peninsula in 1770. The Czech missionary Father Adolf found the first pieces there when the Moravians founded numerous settlements on the forest-covered peninsula in the Atlantic. The mineral was given its name "labradorite" in 1832 by the French mineralogist and professor François Bedaunt (1787 - 1850) due to its location on the Labrador Peninsula. Occasional spellings such as labardorite, labradoride, labradoriet, labradorite, labratorite or lapradorite are therefore incorrect.