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Meteorite Traders

Spiralite Druzy Fossil Pendant

Regular price $57.99 USD
Regular price Sale price $57.99 USD
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Sinistral Spiralite Gastropod Fossils

Ships with Cord and Gift Box

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Spiralite Aura Fossils are fossil spirals are an extinct species which is one of the more plentifully available fossils on the market.

This item can be set in jewelry, wire wrapped and is side drilled for stringing.

    • Size: Use pictures for size reference
    • Location/Origin: India
    • Sinistral left handed spiral
    • Light aura enhancement creates rainbow hue on druzy crystal


Spiralite gemshells are estimated to be over 5 million years old, each of these shell/geodes is the unusual left-hand coiling kind which is a rarity in the domain of shells. Left-hand turning shells are known as sinistra shells. Completely agatized and replaced by stunning quartz druzy in a myriad of colors and crystal types making each one a unique and desirable gem that treads the boundary between fossil and crystal.

Found on a hillside in Central India which was once under the prehistoric sea called Tethys, these geodes are found embedded in an extremely hard rocky matrix and each one has to be carefully extracted by hand. Less than 5% of all geodes extracted have any usable druzy formations.

Historically left-hand coiling shells have been associated with great metaphysical powers in the Hindu, Buddhist, and Tibetan cultures. In ancient Sanskrit, these shells were called "Dakshinavarti" and were associated with Vishnu, the preserver from the Holy Trinity of Hinduism. Many other metaphysical powers are ascribed to these but above all these shells represent one of the finest and most beautiful creations of Mother Nature with unparalleled druzy beauty and rarity.
Ethically mined and handcrafted with age-old lapidary methods.

Because the coiled shells of gastropods are asymmetrical, they possess a quality called chirality, the "handedness" of an asymmetrical structure. Over 90% of gastropod species have dextral (right-handed) shells in their coiling. A small minority of species and genera are almost always sinistral (left-handed).