A rose quartz gravestone

On Monday when I went to Powell’s grave, I noticed a few “boulder with a plaque” gravestones, the most distinctive of which was this lovely chunk of rose quartz:

Quartz is a good choice, since it’s very very very stable at Earth surface conditions, and thus will stick around a lot longer than, say, a marble tombstone. I still think I’d rather opt for a rock bearing tectonic structures or primary structures in the marker for my own final resting place, but a distinctive mineral specimen might not be a bad choice, either. What mineral would you like to have marking your grave? What’s your priority: attractiveness, longevity, or geological superlatives (weirdest P/T conditions, for instance, or rarity)?

0 thoughts on “A rose quartz gravestone”

  1. I think that the rose quartz gravestones come primarily from only one producer (Scott Rose Quartz Quarry) in the Black Hills of South Dakota, near Custer. However, there have been a number of mines in the pegmatites of the area – from time to time they also produce some rose quartz as a coproduct to their primary product (feldspar, mica, spodumene). Ralph Waldo Emerson’s grave in Concord, Massachusetts also has a Black Hills rose quartz marker.

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  2. Likely the most lasting – none at all. Community graves (for after incineration) can be beautiful places.

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  3. This is a lovely rose quartz. The look with the plaque is sort of what we are looking for. A bit ligter so the Light can shine through though. And, we need to get it for a Massachusetts site. Do you know of anywhere up here that sells this sort of set up? Thank you. Jedd

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