741 lines
39 KiB
Groff
741 lines
39 KiB
Groff
|
AGATE is an opaque or translucent stone with bands or concentric
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circles of different colors. The common orange or gray stones
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are sacred to Orlanth and his household of gods. Some Orlanthi
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make wedding rings out of the substance. They especially prize
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the rare variety in which the concentric circles are uneven,
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suggesting a storm rune. Orlanthi carve agate into cameos,
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seals, talismans, and ritual bowls and cups.
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Heortlanders say that agates are the bodies of friendly
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earth spirits who allied with the King of the Gods. Yelm killed
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them for spite, and Kyger Litor stole their bodies to hide them
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in her underground larder.
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Orlanthi superstitions credit agate with the power to
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protect from storms and lightning and the power to kindle
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courage. A rare blue agate is sacred to Dormal. Druops is a
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green kind with a scaly pattern. It is sacred to the Serpent
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Mother (and blessed by Earth cults). Some druops are Snake
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Crystals, a kind of spell reinforcing crystal. All orange agates
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are sacred to Elmal, and that variety is the most common type of
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sensitivity crystal. Gem hunters find agate in western Maniria,
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in the bends of rivers.
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Agate costs 1 to 10 p. per gram at the source. Pieces occur
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in sizes from 10 to 500 grams. One can mistake polished agate
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for chalcedony or onyx.
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ALABASTER is a soft, opaque stone, a uniform chalky white in its
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natural state. It holds any color of dye. It is translucent in
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very thin slices, and at the edges of large pieces. Crafters use
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it for ornamental objects, not jewelry. It has no great role in
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any cult, but many cults use it for ritual items. Most of it
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comes from open pit mines in North Esrolia.
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Alabaster costs 3 p. per kilogram at the source. Pieces
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occur in sizes from 1 to 100 kilograms. One can mistake
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alabaster for marble, chalk, pottery, or coral.
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ALMANDINE is a red translucent stone with a deep violet tint. It
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is uniformly dark, and gem-cutters often cut it in slivers to
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make it look lighter. It is not sacred to any known god or
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saint. Rare pieces are dead crystals. It comes from Wenelian
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mines.
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Almandine costs 3 to 5 p. per gram at the source. Pieces
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occur in sizes from 1 to 1000 grams. One can mistake cut and
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polished almandine for amber, bloodstone, coral, cornelian, ruby,
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or zircon.
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AMBER is an orange, yellow, or red transparent gem, often of un-
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even color. It is soft and will burn. It has a special place in
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the primitive religion of Eol, and in the lives of the Rathori
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and Uncolings. The elves also hold it sacred, identifying it
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with High King Elf. It washes ashore in Yggs Isles, and in the
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White Sea. Primitive peoples gather pieces along the Valind
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Glacier.
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Elves say that ambers are the solidified souls of dryads who
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died in the Darkness. Rathori and Uncolings tell a different
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story. They say that ambers are the hearts of the ice demons who
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come down off the glacier to attack their peoples.
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Pieces with insects inside are sacred to Gorakiki, the
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insect goddess. Humans consider such stones unlucky, because the
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insect's spirit is trapped within the gem. Shamans can contact
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the trapped spirit, but most insects have small and unintelligent
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spirits. No known Form/Set affects amber.
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Amber costs 20 to 50 p. per piece at the source. Pieces
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occur in sizes from 10 to 200 grams. One can mistake amber for
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almandine, a low-quality ruby (if the amber is reddish), or
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cloudy zircon.
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AMETHYST is a grape-purple transparent gem, often with stripes of
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opaque white. It is sacred to various local wine-spirits, and by
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extension to the land-goddesses, also known as grain goddesses.
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Folk belief says it prevents drunkenness and disease, and
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provides a smooth tongue.
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The god of wine wandered all over the land, and drank from a
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sack that never ran dry. Where he stopped to drink, he let fall
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some drops of wine in his gluttony, and these changed into
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amethyst. So says a Ralian legend.
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Miners dig amethyst in Fonrit, Teleos, and Teshnos. Gem
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hunters find it in water-carried deposits in many places.
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Amethyst costs .2 to 10 p. per gram at the source. Pieces occur
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in sizes from 5 to 500 kilograms. One can mistake cut and
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polished amethyst for chalcedony or glass.
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AQUAMARINE is a light blue or blue-green gem, usually
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transparent. As its name implies, aquamarine is sacred to
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Magasta and the Water pantheon. It doubles the duration of any
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water spell enchanted into it. Rich sailors wear charms made of
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the gem. Miners find aquamarine in many coastal lands and
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islands. They say that aquamarines are the eyes of naiads,
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turned to stone by dwarves. The only known ludoch legend
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disagrees, saying that Framanthe gave birth to aquamarines in her
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old age.
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Aquamarine costs 5 to 25 p. per gram at the source. Pieces
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occur in sizes from 1 to 200 grams. One can mistake cut and
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polished aquamarine for sapphire, diamond, or glass.
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ARKATITE is the Gloranthan name for Earth's Alexandrite. It is a
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rare hard transparent gem which appears bright green in daylight
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and light red by firelight or magical light. It is sacred to
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Saint Arkat and to Movement cults, especially Mastakos. It comes
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from the Eastern and Western Rockwoods Mountains.
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Arkatite costs 100 to 1000 p. per piece at the source.
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Pieces occur in sizes from 25 to 100 grams, but quality matters
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more than price. One can mistake cut and polished arkatite for
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emerald in daylight, or for almandine, ruby or zircon by
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firelight.
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BEZOAR is a near-gem only because of its magic powers, not the
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way it looks. It is a hard grayish mass found in the stomachs of
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ruminants. It has magic power from concentrating the animal's
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power to digest grass. A bezoar will neutralize poison in a
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drinking cup.
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Eiritha holds bezoars sacred, and her high priestesses claim
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all bezoars found. Bezoars can occur in the stomachs of any of
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Eiritha's beasts. These are alticamelus, bison, impala, long-
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nose, morokanth (not herd-men), nose-horn, plains elk, rhino,
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sable, and zebra. (The priestesses of the Paps say that the
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long-nose, nose-horn, and plains elk are extinct. Zebra bezoars
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are only rumor.) No known sorcery spells affect bezoar stones.
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Priestesses will not sell real, working bezoars. On the
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black market, a bezoar costs about 1000 p. Bezoars are typically
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between 250 and 2000 grams. One can mistake Bezoar for any
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grayish stone with protruding filaments.
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BLOODSTONE is an opaque, dark red gem, often with green, brown,
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or black splotches. It polishes readily, but often feels wet or
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sticky to the touch. It is sacred to all cults that have special
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relationships with blood. Prominent among these are Gorgorma,
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the Cult of the Bloody Tusk, and the Blood Sun. Xiola Umbar
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cultists make ritual jars out of black and red bloodstone.
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Bloodstone brings success in all activities that involve
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spilling blood. Warriors value all varieties. Midwives use red
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and green bloodstone in their rituals. Some of Arroin's Tears
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and Chalana's Blessings are bloodstones. It comes from various
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mines in Maniria, as well as Jrustela, Kralorela, and the East
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Isles.
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Bloodstone costs 3 to 9 p. per gram at the source. Pieces
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occur in sizes from 10 to 200 grams. One can mistake cut and
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polished bloodstone for almandine, coral, cornelian, jasper, or
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sard.
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CHALCEDONY is a banded or mottled porous stone, waxy, dull, or
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translucent. Colors are usually some combination of golden
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brown, grape-purple, and white. Chalcedony also dyes easily. It
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makes good cameos and talismans, and gems cut en cabochon. Folk
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tales says it protects against Brain Fever, Demoralize, and
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Madness, as well as phantoms and bad dreams at night. Some
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varieties are almost a pure violet, and craftsmen cut these en
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cabochon as talismans of Saint Talor. Dyed stones do not work as
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talismans, so Malkioni gem-workers watch out for fakes.
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Chalcedony comes from Wenelia and Umathela.
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Chalcedony costs 1 to 10 p. per gram at the source. Pieces
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occur in sizes from 10 to 1000 grams. One can mistake cut and
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polished chalcedony for agate, hawk's eye, tiger's eye, topaz, or
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zircon.
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CHRYSOBERYL is a transparent golden-yellow gem which shoots off
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rays of light in full sunlight. It is sacred to Yelm and all his
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associate cults. Some chrysoberyls are magic crystals, either
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Yelmalio's Toe Blood or Arrow Points.
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Catseye chrysoberyls are called cymophanes. They are sacred
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to Basmoli lion-people and to Orlanthi who claim descent from
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Yinkin the Cat.
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Chrysoberyl doubles the normal radius of Light and Glow
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spells cast on it. Yelmists say that chrysoberyl gives victory
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in battle and in legal disputes. Even so, it makes its owner
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friendly. Chrysoberyl comes from Teshnos, Kimos, Jrustela, and
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Vormain.
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Chrysoberyl costs 3 to 30 p. per gram at the source. Pieces
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occur in sizes from 5 to 250 grams. One can mistake cut and
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polished chrysoberyl for citrine (yellow quartz), diamond, glass,
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or zircon. One can mistake cymophanes for quartz or glass.
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CHRYSOPRASE is a mottled or banded apple-green translucent and
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opaque stone. Large stones have brown or white opaque stripes.
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Eurmal, the Grain Goddesses, and Saint Xemela hold chrysoprase
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sacred, a strange combination of gods that vexes the devotees of
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each.
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Eurmali say that their god blew mucus out of his nose on
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occasion, and that this solidified as chrysoprase. Grain Goddess
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initiates say that in the godtime, their ancestors buried sacred
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grain heads and these became gems. Saint Xemela's devotees says
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that these are their saint's favorite gemstones.
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Chrysoprase comes from various mines in Fronela and Ralios.
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It costs .2 to 1 p. per gram at the source. Pieces occur in
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sizes from 5 to 1000 grams. One can mistake cut and polished
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chrysoprase for emerald, glass, jade, or prase.
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CORAL is a mystery to most people, because it grows undersea.
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Land dwellers tell wild tales of coral coming from solidified
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merman blood or merman bones.
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The most valuable kind is a uniform blood red. Gem-workers
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also use pinkish white, peach pink, oily black, robin's-egg blue,
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and mottled kinds. Coral is sacred to Murthdrya and Triolina (it
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is a plant, in Glorantha). Teshnans say that coral protects from
|
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storms and from mishaps crossing rivers.
|
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Productive coral reefs lie off the shores of Teshnos,
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several East Isles, Elamle, and Fonrit. A reef in Fonrit holds a
|
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city carved into the gem-like coral above the high-tide line.
|
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Only Zabdamar know the sorcery spells for coral.
|
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Coral costs 1 to 1000 p. per kilogram at the source. Pieces
|
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occur in sizes up to mountain-sized. One can mistake cut and
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polished red coral for almandine, bloodstone, cornelian, or sard.
|
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|
One can mistake cut and polished pink coral for dyed alabaster or
|
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|
chalcedony. One can mistake cut and polished black coral for jet
|
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|
or, if shiny, obsidian. One can mistake cut and polished blue
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coral for turquoise. One can mistake cut and polished mottled
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coral, depending on its colors, for chalcedony, jade, jasper,
|
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lapis lazuli, onyx, sard, or turquoise.
|
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CORNELIAN is a cherry-red waxy or milky-red translucent stone.
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It stills the blood and softens anger, bringing harmony. It is
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sacred to Chalana Arroy. Her initiates say that cornelians are
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blood from the many wounds that she healed. They became stones
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by magical transmutation when Chalana Arroy healed the wounds
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from which they fell.
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Most Arroin's Tears and Chalana's Blessings are cornelians.
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Some cornelians give a 5 to 25 percentile bonus in casting
|
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|
healing spells. A healer adds the same bonus to her chances of
|
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calming a berserk. A Heal 6 matrix in a cornelian always
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succeeds in casting.
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Cornelian comes from Wenelia, Enkloso, and northern Fonrit.
|
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|
Cornelian costs 10 to 1000 p. per piece at the source. Price
|
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|
depends as much on quality and perceived magical potential as on
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size. Pieces occur in sizes from 5 to 500 grams. One can
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mistake cut and polished cornelian for almandine, bloodstone,
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coral, ruby, or sard.
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DIAMOND is the hardest gem except truestone. It occurs in clear,
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yellow, brown, blue, green, orange, and black varieties. Except
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for the black variety, it is always transparent. Colors are
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consistent throughout the stone, although many stones have flaws,
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such as bubbles or cracks. Diamond cutters cut rough diamonds
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with powdered diamond. They can also use a sliver of truestone.
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Black diamonds are sacred to Subere, Ty Kora Tek, Arkat, and
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Basko (the Black Sun). An Attack Soul matrix in a black diamond
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gives a 1 to 10 MP bonus in overcoming MP. Black diamond seems
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to absorb light, and a fire will dim when a black diamond comes
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close to it. One legend says that black diamonds are shreds of
|
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Nakala's cloak cut off by the coming of Aether.
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Clear diamonds are sacred to Asrelia, Caladra and Aurelion,
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Dayzatar, and Saint Malkion. A Spirit Screen focus or Spirit
|
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Screen/Block/Resistance matrix in a clear diamond adds 1 to 10
|
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points to the defense provided. Dayzatari say that diamonds are
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the thoughts of stars, fallen to earth, and the Pelorian name for
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diamond translates as "starthought."
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Green diamonds are sacred to cults of the light earth.
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Gatasave spell resisting crystals are green diamonds. They say
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that these come from honeydew exuded by extinct holy trees.
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Saint Gerlant wore a blue diamond, and that type is now
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sacred to him.
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Malkioni folklore says that diamonds make their owners
|
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loyal, tenacious, and persistent.
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Diamond mines exist in Teshnos, Dagori Inkarth, Ramalia, and
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many dwarf mountains. Diamonds also wash down from the Shan
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Shan, Nidan, and Tarmo Mountains.
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Diamond costs 100 to 10,000 p. per gram at the source.
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Pieces occur in sizes from .01 to 100 grams, and larger in very
|
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rare finds.
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Uncut and unpolished diamond require a mineral lore expert
|
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|
or miner to identify. When cut and polished, diamond resembles
|
|||
|
many other stones. One can mistake black diamond for obsidian,
|
|||
|
clear diamonds for glass or quartz, yellow and orange diamonds
|
|||
|
for amber, chrysoberyl, glass, quartz, or zircon, brown diamonds
|
|||
|
for glass, quartz, topaz, or zircon, blue diamonds for
|
|||
|
aquamarine, sapphire, glass, quartz, or zircon, and green
|
|||
|
diamonds for emerald, glass, or zircon.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ECHOSTONE is a plain-looking charcoal gray mineral which acts as
|
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|
a mirror for trolls' darksense. Quality varies from specimen to
|
|||
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specimen, and trolls can improve the quality by smoothing the
|
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|
surface of the rock.
|
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|
Scanning into it, a troll darksenses his or her reflection.
|
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|
The source of the sonar is the troll's own head. Thus, the
|
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|
effect is like standing in a dark room, casting Light on one's
|
|||
|
nose, and looking into a mirror. Trolls use echostone for many
|
|||
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profane purposes, such as spying past bends in caves.
|
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|
Echostone is sacred to Dehore and blessed of the other Dark-
|
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ness cults. All troll shamans use it for enchantments of binding
|
|||
|
and controlling or commanding. It also aids in enchanting
|
|||
|
Reflection.
|
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|
Echostone occurs in nearly all igneous rock formations.
|
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|
Troll miners earn from 1 to 100 bolgs per kilogram. Specimens
|
|||
|
come in all sizes from slivers to multi-ton seams. A non-troll
|
|||
|
cannot distinguish it from other rock without having arcane
|
|||
|
mineral and troll lore.
|
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|
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|
EMERALD is a green stone with high luster. It is usually
|
|||
|
translucent but sometimes is transparent. Color is often uneven,
|
|||
|
and may occur in stripes. From certain angles, emerald gives off
|
|||
|
dark bluish green reflections. Emeralds are fragile, but hard to
|
|||
|
scratch.
|
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|
Emeralds are sacred to Ernalda/Dendara and to Earth cults in
|
|||
|
general, as well as to some minor Malkioni saints. Ernalda's
|
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Tears is a spell resisting crystal that is a banded translucent
|
|||
|
variety. Folk wisdom grants emeralds many powers. They protect
|
|||
|
from evil spells. They give their owners oratorical skill, joy,
|
|||
|
ambition, and honesty. This is because they come from the secret
|
|||
|
ovaries of plant spirits.
|
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|
Emeralds come from Enkloso, the northern Redlands, and the
|
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Maidstone Mountains. A huge emerald truestone sits at the center
|
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of the inner temenos (sanctum) of Ernalda in the city of Ernalda,
|
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in Esrolia.
|
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|
Emerald costs 10 to 1000 p. per gram at the source. Pieces
|
|||
|
occur in sizes from .01 to 100 grams, and larger in very rare
|
|||
|
finds. One can mistake cut and polished emerald for aquamarine,
|
|||
|
diamond, glass, jade, prasiolite (green quartz), sapphire, or
|
|||
|
zircon.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GLASS is common throughout the world in jewelry, statues, and
|
|||
|
other objects. Most people prefer the colored kinds, which
|
|||
|
resemble gems. Merchants, at least, can distinguish glass from
|
|||
|
true gemstones.
|
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|
Glass is sacred to Bolongo, and to some other Pamaltelan
|
|||
|
cults. Along the Pamaltelan coastline, people say that it is
|
|||
|
pieces of Trickster's brain. A local god (which varies with the
|
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|
region) knocked these pieces out of his head.
|
|||
|
Glass occurs world-wide, and many know the secret of making
|
|||
|
glass from sand. Other secrets are scattered and jealously
|
|||
|
guarded, such as the secret of unbreakable glass. Form/Set Glass
|
|||
|
is a fairly common sorcery spell.
|
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|
Glass costs 1 to 1000 p. per kilogram at the source. Piece
|
|||
|
size is limited only by magic and technology. One can mistake
|
|||
|
glass for almost anything.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GROW STONE looks like a plant part or (rarely) a whole plant.
|
|||
|
The common leaf stones come in hues ranging from first growth's
|
|||
|
gold green to late summer spinach color. Flower stones come in
|
|||
|
the same colors flowers do. There are also root and berry
|
|||
|
stones. Rarest of all are whole-plant stones.
|
|||
|
Grow stone has a naturally smooth and shiny surface. The
|
|||
|
elves claim that these stones are slowly growing, thus the name.
|
|||
|
(Petrified wood, by contrast, is dead.) Elves can distinguish
|
|||
|
fakes easily, baffling human traders who thought pieces genuine.
|
|||
|
Elves can also tell if a trader has broken a stone, and will
|
|||
|
react unpredictably if he has.
|
|||
|
Grow stone is sacred to Flamal and to all Plant cultists.
|
|||
|
Elves can awaken grow stones with enchantments, including one
|
|||
|
which enables an elf to attune a stone. Humans know that much,
|
|||
|
but no more. Even among elves, only Mineral Lore experts know
|
|||
|
that an attuned grow stone deepens one's elf-sense perceptions.
|
|||
|
The attuned know the wonder of sensing and joining in life
|
|||
|
through a grow stone.
|
|||
|
Elves tell a legend about a Dogwood clan elf named Laslak
|
|||
|
Axehead, who lived in Ballid. He was a hero of the Lesser
|
|||
|
Darkness. He could "smell the wind in the leaves, feel the
|
|||
|
darkness under the roots, hear the heat of decay in the forest
|
|||
|
floor, and see the sap flow inside distant plants." He went to
|
|||
|
sleep with the rest of his clan. When Flamal returned and the
|
|||
|
Mreli awoke, Laslak was gone. A whole dogwood grow stone stood
|
|||
|
over his resting place. Dwarves broke the tree, but elves
|
|||
|
recovered most of the pieces.
|
|||
|
Miners find grow stone where Aldryami woods vanished in the
|
|||
|
godtime. No known sorcery spells affect grow stone.
|
|||
|
Grow stone costs 100 p. per piece at the source. Pieces
|
|||
|
occur in sizes from 10 grams to 100 kilograms, and larger in very
|
|||
|
rare finds. Humans can mistake leaf grow stone for chrysoprase,
|
|||
|
glass, jade, or prase. Root and stem stones look like petrified
|
|||
|
wood or topaz. Flower and berry stones look like shaped gems of
|
|||
|
the appropriate color.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HAWK'S EYE is an opaque orange and brown striped stone which
|
|||
|
craftsmen cut en cabochon. A polished hawk's eye reveals a small
|
|||
|
ray of light on its surface, resembling a hawk or falcon's eye.
|
|||
|
It is sacred to Vrok, god of hawks, and blessed by his associated
|
|||
|
cults Yelm and Yelmalio.
|
|||
|
Hawk's eyes come from mines in Teshnos, Laskal, Jrustela,
|
|||
|
and the East Isles. There, it costs .1 p per gram. Pieces weigh
|
|||
|
from 10 to 500 grams. It is hard to mistake, except for tiger's
|
|||
|
eye, after it is cut and polished. Uncut, it looks like a brown
|
|||
|
stone, such as topaz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IRONROCK is a grayish near-gem made by dwarves. Humans believe
|
|||
|
it is either the raw material for making iron or a by-product of
|
|||
|
making iron. They cannot make iron from it, which implies it is
|
|||
|
a by-product. It burns elves and trolls, however, and deadens
|
|||
|
magic in the same way iron does.
|
|||
|
In any case, specimens are usually one to two ENC in size.
|
|||
|
Ironrocks are irregular, faceted, shiny, and hard. Humans use it
|
|||
|
as a symbol of power on scepters and other ritual objects.
|
|||
|
Enchant Iron does not affect it, and causes the enchanter to lose
|
|||
|
the POW put into the spell.
|
|||
|
Ironrock is very rare in human lands. Mostali trade it
|
|||
|
rarely. Much of it comes from human raids on factories the
|
|||
|
dwarves have abandoned. These raiders can get 1000 p. per
|
|||
|
kilogram.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IVORY is a near-gem, but some sages call it a true gem. The term
|
|||
|
"ivory" includes not only the tusks of elephants and narwhals but
|
|||
|
also the teeth of hippopotami, sea lion, and wild boar.
|
|||
|
Fossilized elephant tusks also fall under this term. Young ivory
|
|||
|
is white, and old ivory is yellow.
|
|||
|
Crafters use ivory for jewelry, magic and mundane talismans,
|
|||
|
and ritual objects. It is sacred to Wachaza and to the Elephant
|
|||
|
God of Enkloso. Elephant ivory is the finest type, and it comes
|
|||
|
from Teshnos and much of Pamaltela. Spells that affect teeth
|
|||
|
affect ivory.
|
|||
|
Ivory costs 10 to 100 p. per kilogram at the source. Tusks
|
|||
|
are 20 to 100 kilograms, and larger in very rare finds. Ivory
|
|||
|
looks something like white jade. One can make cut pieces look
|
|||
|
like pearl.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
JADE is a green, white, violet, or yellowish stone that comes in
|
|||
|
many shades and hues. It often bears stripes or spots of another
|
|||
|
color. Most specimens are opaque, but a few are translucent.
|
|||
|
The most valuable varieties are translucent green with a few
|
|||
|
stripes of white or black.
|
|||
|
Kralorelans and Teshnans use jade to make ceremonial axes.
|
|||
|
They also make musical chimes out of it, and the trolls of the
|
|||
|
Kingdom of Ignorance and Koromondol have imitated this use.
|
|||
|
Craftsmen in Teshnos carve fantastic designs in it. Still
|
|||
|
fancier items come from Hsiang Wan in Kralorela where the
|
|||
|
sorcerers know Form/Set Jade.
|
|||
|
The white kind is sacred to Lhankor Mhy and Emperor Metsyla,
|
|||
|
but for different reasons. Lhankor Mhy scholars say that its
|
|||
|
color represents the purity of truth. Emperor Metsyla's devotees
|
|||
|
say that white jade was the Emperor's medium of writing. They
|
|||
|
claim to be able to detect traces of writing in many specimens.
|
|||
|
Green jade is sacred to the Rice Mother. A piece of green
|
|||
|
jade at the end of the drawstring on a rice bag will repel
|
|||
|
insects.
|
|||
|
Dark specimens of violet and brown jade are sacred to
|
|||
|
Tsankth. They represent the blood of his foes, solidified by
|
|||
|
contact with his weapons and feet.
|
|||
|
Jade guides lost souls after death, so in the East a close
|
|||
|
relative usually places a small stone in the corpse's mouth.
|
|||
|
Common folk credit this power of jade to spirits. Philosophers
|
|||
|
explain that it comes from jade's "right alignment with the earth
|
|||
|
axis."
|
|||
|
There are jade mines in Teshnos, Kralorela, and Onlaks.
|
|||
|
Teshnos is the only source for imperial jade, an emerald green
|
|||
|
translucent variety which merchants value highly. Mining
|
|||
|
companies charge their middlemen 100 to 1000 p. per kilogram,
|
|||
|
depending on quality. Pieces range from 10 grams to 100
|
|||
|
kilograms. Green jade looks like chrysoprase, emerald, or prase.
|
|||
|
White jade looks like ivory or very good chalcedony. Brown jade
|
|||
|
looks like chalcedony. Violet jade looks like amethyst or
|
|||
|
chalcedony.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
JASPER is a striped or spotted opaque stone. Its colors include
|
|||
|
dark red combined with white, orange, brown, or black. Lodrili
|
|||
|
craftsmen carve it into cylinder seals or amulets to ward off
|
|||
|
blindness, drought, and the bites of poisonous snakes. It is
|
|||
|
blessed of Yelm's pantheon (but not Yelm), and of the Earth cults
|
|||
|
as well.
|
|||
|
The largest mines are in Bastis, but other mines exist
|
|||
|
elsewhere in Maniria, in Pent, and on Vormain.
|
|||
|
Jasper costs from 1 to 2 p per gram at the source. Pieces
|
|||
|
range from 10 to 1000 grams. Cut and polished jasper looks like
|
|||
|
coral, bloodstone, onyx, petrified wood, or sard.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
JET is a very hard black or dark brown coal which can take a
|
|||
|
polish. It is the softest of gems, with a velvety waxy luster.
|
|||
|
Some jets have little bits of pyrite in them, giving them a
|
|||
|
shimmering surface dotted with gold.
|
|||
|
Legends say that jet is the crushed and burned bodies of
|
|||
|
Flamal and his followers. Zorak Zoran and his train chopped up
|
|||
|
Flamal and thousands of Flamali, then used darkness magic to
|
|||
|
blacken the corpses. Pieces which the army ate and excreted
|
|||
|
became coal, and pieces which they missed became jet.
|
|||
|
Trolls say that jet has an unusual Darksense "image," and
|
|||
|
that it tastes good. It is blessed of Zorak Zoran and Xiola
|
|||
|
Umbar, and Darkness cults in general.
|
|||
|
Jet, like all coal, is sacred to Aldrya. An extremely rare
|
|||
|
powered crystal, called Flamal's Sap, is jet. Rumor gives it
|
|||
|
powers of fertility and growth.
|
|||
|
Jet occurs in coal mines in Dagori Inkarth, Jrustela, and
|
|||
|
Fonrit. Flamal's Sap comes from coal mines on the border of
|
|||
|
Ralios and Seshnela. No known Form/Set affects coal or jet.
|
|||
|
Jet costs from 1 to 2 p per gram at the source. Pieces
|
|||
|
range from 100 to 10,000 grams. Uncut jet looks like ordinary
|
|||
|
coal. Cut and polished jet looks like much black coral or
|
|||
|
obsidian.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
JEWELFLOR is a human name for the plant and the gem which elves
|
|||
|
call Laslak. It is quite rare, yet is the most common of the
|
|||
|
Aldryami jewel-plants. The plant is a small biennial which makes
|
|||
|
one to three bright crystalline flowers in late Earth Season of
|
|||
|
its second year. The plant is delicate and needs extensive care.
|
|||
|
The blossoms are glassy and shaped like tiny daffodil flowers.
|
|||
|
When fresh, they have an enthralling scent. They are fragile,
|
|||
|
but do not decay. Most are transparent white. Rare specimens
|
|||
|
are perfectly clear or white tinged with violet or blue. No
|
|||
|
known Form/Set affects any jewel-plant.
|
|||
|
Elves say that Laslak was a prince of the white elves, who
|
|||
|
loved himself above all. When he caught sight of his reflection
|
|||
|
in a pond, he lingered there until he died of hunger. His body
|
|||
|
became a flower.
|
|||
|
Elves give Jewelflor to their friends, and often expect
|
|||
|
something in return. A typical flower, with stem, weighs 50
|
|||
|
grams. Jewelflor looks like a shaped gem of the appropriate
|
|||
|
color.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LAPIS LAZULI is a dark blue gem, usually spotted or striped with
|
|||
|
many shades of blue. It is lustrous and opaque. It makes pretty
|
|||
|
jewelry, pigment, murals, and ritual objects. A golden-spotted
|
|||
|
variety is sacred to Lorian Godriver. All types are sacred to
|
|||
|
river gods, because rivers carry the stone down from their
|
|||
|
sources. Lapis lazuli washes away melancholy.
|
|||
|
Lapis Lazuli mines exist in the Dagori Inkarth and Elder
|
|||
|
Wilds regions of the Rockwood Mountains, in the upper Hachuan
|
|||
|
Shan, and near Bad Deal, in Vesmonstran, Ralios.
|
|||
|
Lapis lazuli costs from .1 to .5 p. per gram at the source.
|
|||
|
Pieces range from 100 grams to 100 kilograms. Cut and polished
|
|||
|
lapis lazuli looks like coral or turquoise.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OBSIDIAN is a type of volcanic glass, black or gray with some-
|
|||
|
times a golden or silver sheen. Flowering obsidian is a variety
|
|||
|
with white circles. Obsidian holds a very sharp edge, and the
|
|||
|
dragonewts use it in their weapons.
|
|||
|
It is sacred to Argan Argar and his mother, Xentha, and to
|
|||
|
Raven and some minor godlings. The power enhancing Nipple Stone
|
|||
|
is an obsidian, said to be one of Xentha's ten million nipples.
|
|||
|
Obsidian is symbolic of the triumph of darkness and cold over
|
|||
|
heat and light.
|
|||
|
Obsidian occurs in most volcanic areas, including Maniria,
|
|||
|
Mari, Kimos, and some East Isles. Many multi-ton pieces survive
|
|||
|
from Argan Argar's Castle of Black Glass in the Shadowlands.
|
|||
|
Spells that affect glass also affect obsidian.
|
|||
|
Obsidian costs from 1 to 5 p. per kilogram at the source.
|
|||
|
Trolls charge the same price in bolgs. Cut and polished obsidian
|
|||
|
looks like black diamond, coral, or jet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ONYX is a stone with even layers of opaque dark and light, often
|
|||
|
white and black. Sard-onyx is a type which has brown and white
|
|||
|
layers.
|
|||
|
Onyx is sacred to various thief gods and to Disorder
|
|||
|
cultists. It provokes discord and induces lack of passion.
|
|||
|
Trickster wore a cloak of woven onyx when he stole the roc's
|
|||
|
eggs, and used the cloak to fool the roc.
|
|||
|
A Befuddle focus carved into onyx gives a bonus to casting.
|
|||
|
A carved Befuddle matrix gives a +1 to +5 MP bonus to overcoming
|
|||
|
MP.
|
|||
|
Onyx comes from Umathela, the East Isles, and Vesmonstran.
|
|||
|
Onyx costs from 1 to 5 p. per kilogram at the source.
|
|||
|
Pieces range from .1 to 100 kilograms. Cut and polished onyx
|
|||
|
looks like agate, mottled coral, or jasper.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OPAL is an iridescent precious stone, displaying a rainbow of
|
|||
|
playing colors. The lighter "white opal" is translucent, showing
|
|||
|
light blue, red, and sometimes green. It is sacred to Issaries.
|
|||
|
Issarites say it is an example of how their god made something
|
|||
|
out of nothing. In this case, he took ordinary rock and gave it
|
|||
|
sparkles of color and light.
|
|||
|
There is also a darker "black opal," which rarely has a
|
|||
|
truly black background. Both white and black opal are sacred to
|
|||
|
Kyger Litor. Trolls say that opals have an odd humming "image"
|
|||
|
when Darksensed. They say that opals are the lining of giant
|
|||
|
trolls' eyes.
|
|||
|
Opal mines exist in the mountains of Peloria. In recent
|
|||
|
years, splendid opals have come from the East Isles. Kralorelans
|
|||
|
consider the stone a symbol of loyalty and hope. Spells which
|
|||
|
affect opal also affect some non-gems that look nothing like
|
|||
|
opal, generally called false opals.
|
|||
|
Opal costs from 1 to 5 p. per gram at the source. Pieces
|
|||
|
range from 50 to 500 grams. Cut and polished precious opal is
|
|||
|
unmistakable.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PEARL is a white, black, blue, gray, or off-white sphere or
|
|||
|
spheroid. Oysters form pearls inside their bodies. Pearl is
|
|||
|
soft, and decomposes over a period of 100 to 200 years. Mother
|
|||
|
of pearl is a similar substance taken from the shells of pearl
|
|||
|
oysters.
|
|||
|
Black pearls are sacred to Molocca, the goddess of mollusks.
|
|||
|
Blue pearls are sacred to Tholaina, and white pearls to
|
|||
|
Brastalos. All varieties are sacred to Beast cultists.
|
|||
|
White pearls make their owners friendly, and fill them with
|
|||
|
integrity and purity. Legend says that white pearls are the
|
|||
|
purified souls of the humble and gregarious oysters.
|
|||
|
Rumor states that Zabdamar have Form/Set Pearl.
|
|||
|
Pearls costs from 10 to 500 p. each at the source, depending
|
|||
|
on size, quality, and color. The rarer blue and black varieties
|
|||
|
are more expensive than the white. Off-white pearls are less
|
|||
|
expensive than white, and gray pearls are the cheapest.
|
|||
|
Individual pearls weigh from 1 to 25 grams. Rare giant pearls
|
|||
|
(from giant oysters) weigh up to 500 grams and bidding begins at
|
|||
|
10,000 p. One can mistake pearls for beads or ivory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PETRIFIED WOOD is a near-gem. Polished pieces may be quite
|
|||
|
attractive, but they are still opaque brown or gray rocks.
|
|||
|
Humans have little use for petrified wood. Mostali view it
|
|||
|
as blasphemous, and avoid or smash it. Elves and their ilk,
|
|||
|
however, weep and wail over it, and carve it for memorials to
|
|||
|
dead loved ones. Thus, human traders sometimes bring pieces to
|
|||
|
elf forests, hoping for valuable goods in return.
|
|||
|
Stonewood is the largest concentration of petrified wood in
|
|||
|
Glorantha. It is next to Foulblood Wood in Heortland. Other
|
|||
|
places have a petrified branch, tree, or small stand of trees at
|
|||
|
most.
|
|||
|
It is difficult to put a price on petrified wood, because of
|
|||
|
the wide range of attitudes toward it and the elves' peculiar
|
|||
|
economics. Pieces range in size up to entire trees. One can
|
|||
|
mistake a cut piece for a poor-quality hawk's eye or tiger's eye,
|
|||
|
sard, or a root grow stone.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PRASE is a lustrous light gray-green stone. It is opaque, and
|
|||
|
many pieces are mottled. All Fertility cults bless it,
|
|||
|
especially Deezola and Hon-Eel. They say that it is a drop of
|
|||
|
dew fallen from the cup of fertility.
|
|||
|
Prase comes from small mines in Fronela and Ralios. It
|
|||
|
costs 1 to 2 p. per gram at the source. Pieces weigh between 10
|
|||
|
and 100 grams. One could mistake cut and polished prase for
|
|||
|
chrysoprase, growstone, or green jade.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The term QUARTZ covers a diverse group of stones, confusingly
|
|||
|
named. "Rock crystal" is a synonym for quartz, but sometimes
|
|||
|
refers only to the clear variety. The term "magic crystal"
|
|||
|
refers to a different but overlapping class of gems, some clear
|
|||
|
and some white or with color. Many unpowered crystals are, in
|
|||
|
fact, clear quartz.
|
|||
|
Clear quartz is sacred to Himile and Valind, because it is
|
|||
|
ice that has turned to stone. Quartzes with other minerals
|
|||
|
inside them are sacred to various other deities, depending on the
|
|||
|
color and shape of the inclusion.
|
|||
|
Star cults value two kinds, both called star-quartz. One is
|
|||
|
a quartz with star-shaped filaments inside it. The other is the
|
|||
|
true star-quartz, which reflects light as a star sapphire does.
|
|||
|
Both are blessed of the star cults. Yelm blesses quartzes that
|
|||
|
have gold inside them, and other deities bless quartzes that have
|
|||
|
bits of their associated metal in them.
|
|||
|
Citrine is a lemon-yellow quartz. One can distinguish it
|
|||
|
from chrysoberyl because it does not send off rays of light. It
|
|||
|
is blessed of Yelmalio and other lesser deities of light, such as
|
|||
|
Golden Bow, Yelorna, and Lorkanos.
|
|||
|
Prasiolite is a leek-green quartz, blessed of Fertility
|
|||
|
cults.
|
|||
|
Rose quartz is blessed of the lunar pantheon.
|
|||
|
Aventurine is a dark green quartz with mica glitter. It is
|
|||
|
blessed of Asrelia.
|
|||
|
Blue quartz is blessed of the Felster Lake Spirit.
|
|||
|
Quartz occurs in small deposits around the world.
|
|||
|
Spelunkers and trolls often run across outcroppings in caves.
|
|||
|
Quartz costs 10 to 25 p. per kilogram at the source. Pieces
|
|||
|
weigh between .1 and 100 kilograms. Traders often mistake quartz
|
|||
|
for various gems, depending on the color.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
RUBY can be transparent or opaque, but is always a lustrous red
|
|||
|
stone. Some rubies display a star pattern, catseye, or silky
|
|||
|
sheen. Only inferior stones have uneven or pale color. Some
|
|||
|
gem-traders use the term "spinel" for those, but sages reject the
|
|||
|
term. Catseye rubies are called Snakeseye, Turtleseye, or
|
|||
|
Owlseye, depending on the sacred animal of a culture.
|
|||
|
Humakti hold all rubies sacred as the solidified blood of
|
|||
|
heroes. Star rubies are especially sacred because they fell from
|
|||
|
the Sword Stars or the constellation Humakt.
|
|||
|
Cultists of Lodril and the Lowfires hold all brilliant
|
|||
|
rubies sacred. For other members of the Yelm pantheon, star
|
|||
|
rubies are blessed stones. A Pelorian legend says that rubies
|
|||
|
are the ripe berries of the Yunia bush, which grows in the sky.
|
|||
|
Sapphires are the unripe berries, and Yelmists sometimes bury
|
|||
|
them so they can ripen.
|
|||
|
Since the rising of the Red Moon, Lunar cultists have prized
|
|||
|
all red stones. This is purely for the color, and not for any
|
|||
|
ancient affinity.
|
|||
|
The so-called Esrolian Ruby is a power enhancing crystal.
|
|||
|
Some Arroin's Tears and Chalana's Blessings are rubies.
|
|||
|
Ruby wards off evil thoughts, lust, pestilential vapors,
|
|||
|
disputes, and loss of rank. Most rubies come from Teshnos, but a
|
|||
|
few come from the Hungry Plateau, in Peloria, and the island of
|
|||
|
Teleos.
|
|||
|
Ruby costs 1 to 10 p. per gram at the source. Pieces weigh
|
|||
|
between .1 and 30 grams. One can mistake Ruby for almandine,
|
|||
|
amber, arkatite (by firelight), cornelian, sard, or zircon.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SAPPHIRE is a blue or bluish-green gem, transparent and bril-
|
|||
|
liant. It comes in various hues.
|
|||
|
The cult of Uleria holds all sapphires sacred. They claim
|
|||
|
that these gems multiply through the power of love.
|
|||
|
Shamans also value the stone as aiding in communication with
|
|||
|
the spirits. In fact, some milky sapphires are Ghost Shields
|
|||
|
spirit supporting crystals.
|
|||
|
Star sapphires are blessed of the Yelm pantheon, whose
|
|||
|
cultists say that they are the skin of angels.
|
|||
|
Catseye sapphires are blessed by Heler, for obscure reasons.
|
|||
|
Sapphire wards off envy, fraud, and poison, while giving its
|
|||
|
owner wisdom and vigilance.
|
|||
|
Sapphires come from Porent, Brolia, and Umathela, but the
|
|||
|
best and largest ones come from Teshnos. It costs 1 to 10 p. per
|
|||
|
gram at the source. Pieces weigh between .1 and 100 grams. One
|
|||
|
can mistake Sapphire for aquamarine, blue diamond, emerald, or
|
|||
|
zircon.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARD is a red-brown stone, similar to cornelian. Some varieties
|
|||
|
are transparent, while others are milky. No known cult prizes
|
|||
|
it. Mines in Wenelia yield small amounts annually. Craftsmen
|
|||
|
cut it, and con men try to sell it as another gem.
|
|||
|
Sard costs .1 p. per gram at the source. Pieces weigh
|
|||
|
between 5 and 500 grams. One can mistake Sard for bloodstone,
|
|||
|
coral, cornelian, jasper, petrified wood, ruby, or zircon.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TIGER'S EYE is a brown and yellow striped stone, sometimes with
|
|||
|
dark red lines. When cut en cabochon, it reveals a line of light
|
|||
|
within the stone, like the eye of a tiger. It is sacred to the
|
|||
|
Tiger God, and Teshnans and Kralorelans use it to ward off the
|
|||
|
Tiger People.
|
|||
|
Most of it comes from Teshnos and the East Isles, but some
|
|||
|
comes from Elamle. Tiger's eye costs .2 p. per gram at the
|
|||
|
source. Pieces weigh between 5 and 500 grams. One can mistake
|
|||
|
polished or unpolished tiger's eye for hawk's eye. One can also
|
|||
|
mistake unpolished tiger's eye for chalcedony and various other
|
|||
|
stones, including topaz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TOPAZ is a transparent brown or yellow gem of too deep a color to
|
|||
|
be called chrysoberyl. Green or red-tinted yellow stones are
|
|||
|
also topaz, and are sacred to the Earth. One translucent brown
|
|||
|
variety is called smoky topaz because it creates a haze in the
|
|||
|
light around it.
|
|||
|
Smoky topaz manifests the Disorder rune and the Disorder
|
|||
|
cults hold it sacred or blessed. Smoke Rocks, a kind of Spell
|
|||
|
Reinforcing crystal, are smoky topaz.
|
|||
|
Very light yellow topazes charm spirits and please the
|
|||
|
ancestors. Thus, magicians use them in amulets.
|
|||
|
Topaz comes from the Wenelian Islands of Maniria. It costs
|
|||
|
1 to 5 p. per gram at the source, with the yellow gems being more
|
|||
|
valuable than the brown. Pieces weigh between 5 and 500 grams.
|
|||
|
One can mistake Topaz for chalcedony, brown diamond, root or stem
|
|||
|
grow stone, or unpolished hawk's eye or tiger's eye.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TURQUOISE is a blue opaque stone, often with veins of black,
|
|||
|
brown, or white.
|
|||
|
It is sacred to Annilla and Artmal. Annilla landed on a bed
|
|||
|
of turquoise when she fell from the sky. That bed broke her
|
|||
|
fall, say the Artmali.
|
|||
|
Turquoise protects its wearer from falling and from being
|
|||
|
under falling structures. How this works is a matter of some
|
|||
|
speculation.
|
|||
|
Mines exist in Dragon Pass, Teshnos, and Kralorela, as well
|
|||
|
as Teleos, Loral, and Onlaks. Turquoise costs .1 to .5 p. per
|
|||
|
gram at the source. Pieces weigh between 5 and 5000 grams. One
|
|||
|
can mistake Turquoise for any of several types of coral or for
|
|||
|
lapis lazuli.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ZIRCON is a beautiful but fragile translucent stone, occurring in
|
|||
|
a variety of colors. Humans consider it a weak relative of
|
|||
|
diamond.
|
|||
|
The Hyacinth variety, a yellow-red, is sacred to Voria. A
|
|||
|
red variety is sacred to Babeester Gor, and gemcutters cut it
|
|||
|
into the shape of drops of blood.
|
|||
|
Zircon occurs all over Genertela, but the best and largest
|
|||
|
stones come from Teshnos. It costs .5 to 1 p. per gram at the
|
|||
|
source. Pieces weigh between 5 and 500 grams. One can mistake
|
|||
|
Zircon for almost anything, depending on its color.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|