spinel crystal - Mogokspinel crystal - Mogok

How Do Spinels Form?


Available in many colors, spinels are becoming more popular with consumers. Learn how spinels form and how these gemstones get their colors.

5 Minute Read

spinel crystal - Mogok - how do spinels form
Red spinel crystal, 1.7 x 1.3 x 1.2 cm. Mogok, Myanmar. © Rob Lavinsky, www.iRocks.com. Used with permission.

What is Spinel?

The term “spinel” actually describes a large group of related magnesium aluminum oxide mineral species. They’re all isometric aluminum oxides with magnesium, iron, zinc, and traces of other elements. However, the gemstones we typically call spinels form just a subset of this larger group.

Spinels are frequently used to simulate other more well-known or expensive gemstones, especially in birthstone jewelry. Today, many consumers are unfamiliar with spinel as a gemstone in its own right, but that’s slowly changing.

Where Do Spinels Form?

Spinels occur most commonly in magnesium-rich limestone deposits that have been subjected to contact, and sometimes regional, metamorphism. Powerful metamorphic forces convert soft limestone into harder dolomite marble. This causes the available aluminum, oxygen, and magnesium to crystallize into spinel.

spinels on marble matrix - Vietnam
Spinel crystals, most about 1 cm in size, on marble matrix, 13.6 x 10.3 x 3.9 cm. Luc Yen, Yen Bai Province, Vietnam. © Rob Lavinsky, www.iRocks.com. Used with permission.

Some spinel is mined directly from the primary rock where it formed. However, many secondary alluvial deposits house large quantities


Emily Frontiere

Emily Frontiere is a GIA Graduate Gemologist. She is particularly experienced working with estate/antique jewelry.


International Gem Society

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