How to Spot Real (and Fake) Moldavite

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Moldavite is well known for its deep green color, unique texture, meteorite crash origins, and powerful energy that can help with spiritual awakening and healing. For these reasons, moldavite is incredibly popular, which comes along with numerous fakes flooding the market. In this article, we’ll tell you how to determine if your moldavite is real, how to spot a fake, and what to look out for when buying moldavite so that you can use your moldavite to its full potential.

Things You Should Know

  • Look for a bottle green color, a grooved and rugged shape, and flaws like bubbles and inclusions inside real moldavite.
  • Avoid moldavite if it has no irregularities, is a bright and glossy green, and has a smooth shape.
  • Buy moldavite from reputable sellers who source moldavite from the Czech Republic, Austria, Germany, or Poland.
Section 1 of 3:

Signs Moldavite Is Real

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  1. How.com.vn English: Step 1 Real moldavite is bottle green in color.
    Moldavite is not a true gem or crystal but a tektite, a natural glass that forms from an asteroid colliding into Earth. Inspect your moldavite for a nonuniform green color with a glassy, slightly translucent appearance. Moldavite can range from very light green to dark, almost black green and can display this full range in a single piece.[1]
    • Some moldavite pieces have brown streaks and take on a more mossy green appearance.
  2. How.com.vn English: Step 2 Moldavite has a grooved and rugged texture.
    A real, raw piece of moldavite is not smooth and has hundreds of wrinkles and grooves on its surface. Some pieces can be spikey and jagged, but they will still have a ripple like appearance.[2]
    • If your moldavite is faceted, meaning it is cut and polished like a diamond with flat sides and a pointed end, it will not have this grooved, rugged appearance. Look for other characteristics to determine if it’s real.
    • Researchers believe that water etched these grooves in the newly formed moldavite.[3]
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  3. How.com.vn English: Step 3 Moldavite is small with an irregular, flat shape.
    Most moldavite is flat and elongated with a rough and fractured appearance. Moldavite pieces can also be elliptical, like a stretched sphere, or teardrop in shape.[4] The fragments are small and rarely weigh more than 3 ounces (100 grams).[5]
    • Moldavite can be faceted like diamonds and other gems, but it is more common to find them unfaceted due to their unusual shape and texture.
  4. How.com.vn English: Step 4 There are bubbles inside real moldavite.
    Moldavite contains elongated air bubbles that are typically regular in shape. These bubbles formed as gas became trapped inside the cooling moldavite. Most pieces of moldavite will contain many bubbles, but these bubbles are rarely found near the glass’ surface.[6]
    • You will likely need a magnifying glass or microscope to see the bubbles within your moldavite.
  5. How.com.vn English: Step 5 Real moldavite is full of imperfections.
    You won’t find a piece of moldavite that doesn’t have inclusions, or pieces of other materials, inside. The most common inclusion is lechatelierite, a quartz-like glass, that makes long, wiry imperfections inside the moldavite. The inclusions are extremely small, so you will need a magnifying glass or microscope to see them.[7]
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Section 2 of 3:

Spotting Fake Moldavite

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  1. How.com.vn English: Step 1 Fake moldavite doesn’t have any irregularities.
    The most telling sign of a fake moldavite is a lack of bubbles and the wire-like lechatelierite inclusions. Synthetic moldavite will not have the wiry inclusions that each piece of real moldavite has in abundance. While bubbles may form when the glass is being poured into the molds, these bubbles will be fewer, more circular, and towards the glass’ surface, which you won’t find in real moldavite.[8]
  2. How.com.vn English: Step 2 A bright, uniform color means moldavite is fake.
    Though both real and fake moldavite are made out of glass, real moldavite gets its green color from its iron content while fake moldavite is dyed. You can tell the moldavite is fake if it has a bright, lustrous green appearance without the variation and almost dirty appearance real moldavite has. Any shops that sell moldavite in a color other than green, such as red, blue, or yellow, are fake.[9]
    • You can place a suspected fake piece of moldavite under a UV light. If the piece appears to fluoresce or glow and takes on a yellow-green color, it’s a fake.[10]
  3. How.com.vn English: Step 3 Fake moldavite has a less natural shape and texture.
    Most sellers use a mold to create their moldavite, which will have a more smooth, perfect looking contour compared to the unique, amorphous shapes of real moldavite. The grooves and ridges on fake moldavite will also be more uniform and polished than real moldavite.[11]
    • Look through sellers’ moldavite inventory. Since they use molds to create synthetic moldavite, you will likely see the same moldavite shape and appearance even if the pieces are different sizes.[12]
    • Some shops are creating more natural looking moldavite by mimicking how real moldavite’s grooves and ripples were etched. However, use a magnifying glass or microscope to look for grooves and ripples that are straight and evenly spaced which indicate that the moldavite is fake.[13]
  4. How.com.vn English: Step 4 Fake moldavite has a clear, glossy appearance.
    Synthetic moldavite is made by carefully pouring melted glass into molds. This results in moldavite that is transparent and shiny, even if the surface is properly ridged and rugged. You can’t see all the way through real moldavite because it is composed of other minerals and elements that makes it more opaque.[14]
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Section 3 of 3:

What to Look for When Buying Moldavite

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  1. How.com.vn English: Step 1 Ask where the moldavite comes from.
    Moldavite is only found in the Czech Republic, Austria, Germany, and Poland. Avoid buying moldavite from shops that state their moldavite was mined in a different country, or if they do not say where their moldavite was sourced from at all.[15]
  2. How.com.vn English: Step 2 Be wary of cheap prices.
    The rising popularity of moldavite means that it is more expensive than ever, averaging about $15 to $25 per ounce/gram but often going for even more.[16] However, synthetic moldavite is sold at a fraction of the real price. If you are looking at moldavite that is perfectly shaped, large, and clear but somehow also inexpensive, it’s a fake.[17]
  3. How.com.vn English: Step 3 Buy moldavite from reputable sellers.
    Look for shops that have great reviews and list their sourcing locations. Many sellers will be from the Czech Republic because that is where most moldavite comes from. Avoid buying from eBay and Amazon as they are well known for listing fake moldavite.[18]
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Expert Q&A

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  • Question
    How do you clean moldavite?
    How.com.vn English: Himesh Patel
    Himesh Patel
    Metallurgical Engineer & Manager
    Himesh Patel is a Metallurgical Engineer at Mcclelland Laboratories in Reno, Nevada. With over five years of industry and graduate research experience in the raw materials industry, Himesh has extensive knowledge of mining and mineral extraction and recovery methods, mine financing, and the environmental impacts of mining. He received his MS in Metallurgical Engineering from the University of Nevada, Reno, and a Dual Degree in Mineral Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology (Indian School of Mines), Dhanbad. Himesh is passionate about educating the public about the minerals industry.
    How.com.vn English: Himesh Patel
    Metallurgical Engineer & Manager
    Expert Answer
    Moldavite has glass-like physical properties and could be treated as any material made from glass. Water, homemade cleaner, soap and water, or commercial glass cleaner could be used to clean moldavite.
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      Tips

      • You may feel a heated or tingling sensation when you hold real moldavite.[19]
      • If you are still unsure whether your moldavite is real or fake, there are several moldavite Facebook groups you can join to get other users’ opinions.
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      Thanks for reading our article! If you’d like to learn more about rocks and metals, check out our in-depth interview with Himesh Patel.

      About This Article

      How.com.vn English: Himesh Patel
      Co-authored by:
      Metallurgical Engineer & Manager
      This article was co-authored by Himesh Patel and by How.com.vn staff writer, Devin McSween. Himesh Patel is a Metallurgical Engineer at Mcclelland Laboratories in Reno, Nevada. With over five years of industry and graduate research experience in the raw materials industry, Himesh has extensive knowledge of mining and mineral extraction and recovery methods, mine financing, and the environmental impacts of mining. He received his MS in Metallurgical Engineering from the University of Nevada, Reno, and a Dual Degree in Mineral Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology (Indian School of Mines), Dhanbad. Himesh is passionate about educating the public about the minerals industry. This article has been viewed 20,460 times.
      4 votes - 100%
      Co-authors: 9
      Updated: May 2, 2024
      Views: 20,460
      Categories: Metals
      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 20,460 times.

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