Crystal
Malachite
Tamrakupya / Haritkam
Copper Carbonate Hydroxide — Monoclinic, Mohs 3.5–4
Essence
Guides the heart through difficulty into renewal and emotional protection. It works through the Heart chakra (Anahata), the seat of love, compassion, and the open exchange of relational connection. Under Venus (Shukra)'s influence, orients the heart through difficulty into renewal, aligning grief-processing and protection of the emotional field during exposure to others' intensity. Reach for it when navigating transformation, protection, grief.
Anchors
Sourcing
Democratic Republic of Congo (largest source — verify supply chain ethics); Zambia; Russia. Raw malachite dust is toxic — always use polished pieces for wear and carry. Avoid water cleansing (copper leaches).
Classical lineage
Classical Vedic literature does not specifically reference this stone. Modern usage is grounded in mineralogical observation and energetic-tradition practice.
Ritual of care
This stone is water-sensitive — wiping preserves its structural integrity and surface quality
Friday is Shukra's day — Venusian grace and refinement are accessible
Pairs with
The Honest Stone
What we actually know about Malachite (Copper Carbonate Hydroxide)
Every claim on this page is tagged with one of five evidence tiers. We separate what is mineralogically verifiable from what is classical, from what is modern belief, from what we ourselves doubt.
- •Copper carbonate hydroxide (Cu₂CO₃(OH)₂) — secondary mineral in oxidised copper deposits.
- •Mohs 3.5-4 — soft; scratches easily.
- •Specific gravity 3.6-4.05; effervesces with HCl (carbonate test).
Verifiable by mindat.org / GIA / standard mineralogy.
- •Mayura-mani — peacock stone, worn for vibrant assertion, child-protection (especially against the evil eye), and creative momentum. — Egyptian and Mesopotamian classical traditions; adopted in Indian Vastu lore
Cited from a named primary source — Garuda Purana, Rasaratna Samuccaya, Brihat Samhita.
- •Placed at child's bed or worn around child's neck for protection (Egyptian tradition, adopted in Mediterranean and South Asian usage).
- •Worn at the heart during creative blocks or emotional restructuring.
- •Used externally only — never as elixir (toxic copper).
Held in Jyotish, Reiki, or Western metaphysical lineages — not from primary classical text.
- •Heart-chakra activation and shadow-work amplifier.
- •EMF protection — modern claim; partial mineralogical basis (copper conducts) but no clinical evidence.
Popularised post-1980s. No classical or scientific support.
- •Used as elixir (oral water-infused) — DANGEROUS due to copper toxicity.
Siyara explicitly flags doubt about this claim.
What we do NOT claim
- — We strongly counsel against malachite elixirs or any oral use.
Authenticity & Fakes
How to tell real from imitation
Real specimens look like
Concentric banding (like tree rings); opaque deep green; cool dense feel; no air bubbles.
Common fakes
Resin / plastic 'malachite'
Plastic cast with green pigment in concentric pattern.
Tell-tale sign · Lighter than real (low specific gravity); warm to touch; bands may look perfectly round (real is irregular).
Dyed howlite or chrysocolla in malachite-mimic pattern
Other minerals dyed and shaped to mimic banding.
Tell-tale sign · Hardness mismatch (howlite is Mohs 3.5, malachite 3.5-4 — close but real malachite has visible bandhing under loupe).
30-second home test
Hardness — real malachite is Mohs 3.5-4 (will scratch with copper coin).
When NOT to use
Times this stone is not the right choice
- ·DO NOT make malachite elixirs or any oral preparation — copper toxicity.
- ·Wash hands after handling polished pieces.
- ·If transformation feels too forced or destabilising, remove and use only briefly.
- ·Children — supervised wear only; never as a teether or chewing object.
Pricing & Sourcing
What this stone should cost in India
Coming Soon
Pricing tables go live when our shop opens. We are finalising sourcing, packaging, GST registration, and required compliance disclosures before listing a single price.
Sourcing transparency
Origins · Democratic Republic of Congo (modern primary), Russia (Urals — historic), Australia, USA (Arizona)
Traceability · wholesaler attested
DRC malachite has artisanal-mining ethical concerns. Look for Kibali or Tenke-certified specimens. Russian Ural malachite is rare and museum-grade now.