Red Beryl

Crystal system · Hexagonal
Red Beryl specimen
Photo: Robert M. Lavinsky · CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

About Red Berylextended article

Red beryl is the rare red variety of beryl, the same mineral species that yields emerald and aquamarine. Its raspberry-to-crimson colour comes from manganese. Gem-quality crystals are exceptionally scarce — essentially all faceted material has come from a single area in Utah — which makes red beryl one of the most sought-after collector gems.

Properties

Beryl is hexagonal, hard (7.5–8) and forms prismatic crystals; red beryl typically occurs as small, sharp, tabular-to-prismatic crystals perched in cavities. The older trade name 'red emerald' is discouraged because the stone is not emerald (which is specifically the green, chromium/vanadium-coloured variety).

Occurrence

Crystals form in topaz-bearing rhyolite, a volcanic setting quite different from the pegmatites that produce most beryl. The Ruby-Violet claims in the Wah Wah Mountains and the Thomas Range, both in Utah, are the principal sources. It is closely linked to the catalogue entry for red emerald.

Frequently asked questions

What is the chemical formula of Red Beryl?

The chemical formula of Red Beryl is Be3Al2Si6O18.

What crystal system does Red Beryl belong to?

Red Beryl crystallises in the Hexagonal crystal system.

Is Red Beryl rare?

As a collector mineral, Red Beryl is generally considered rare.

References & databases

Mindat.org is the world’s largest open mineralogy database. Our descriptions are written independently and fact-checked.