![]() Alchemist-hp (talk) (CC BY-SA 3.0 DE, via Wikimedia Commons If it does get to crystalize, we’ll normally see it as thin sheets, flakes, or dendritic crystal clusters (as seen below). ![]() Being it’s a member of the cubic crystal family, any silver crystals that form are rarely the cubes, octahedrons, and dodecahedrons typically seen (unless we’re talking nanocrystals, which we’ll get to later.) Very very rarely, if silver is born in an open vug or limited openings of fractures with just enough space for it to grow, sometimes, it can form some fascinating crystal formations. What is commonly known as “native silver” is silver that doesn’t have a distinctive crystal habit. ![]() Yes, silver is a mineral that can be a crystal. I know you may not think of silver as a crystal.ĭoesn’t look like one, but I assure you that it is. Crystals should be used as a complement to and not as a replacement for regular medical care/consultations. ![]() So, today, please join me on a cosmic journey as we connect the dots between the sacred geometry inherent in crystals, and one very special element and mineral īORING DISCLAIMER: I think you already know that I’m not a doctor and am not giving medical advice. Took a bit for the creative force to strike - but here we are and we’re going Big!!Īs one of the seven important metals of Alchemists, silver has had a persistent and everlasting role in history. After a pretty popular blog post I’d written up on gold, I was asked more than several times to do a similar post on silver properties: ![]()
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