Journey into the Giant Selenite Crystal Caves of Mexico by Leela Hutchison G.G.

The world's largest crystals found on planet earth!

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ALUMNI SPOTLIGHT

Gemologist Aims to Pique World’s Curiosity in Giant Crystals

Kristin A. Aldridge
April 27, 2018

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Leela Hutchison, GIA GG, was with the first group to explore giant crystal caves in Naica, Mexico in 2001. Since then, she has been passionate about sharing her experience and knowledge of gems, minerals and crystals with audiences around the world. Photo courtesy of Leela Hutchison
Gemologist and rock hound Leela Hutchison never imagined her lifelong passion for adventure and “intense” love of gems and minerals would lead to exploring the world’s largest crystals and sharing her knowledge with audiences around the world. But Hutchison’s interests collided in 2001, when she found herself carefully climbing over massive 40-foot-tall crystals in 100 percent humidity and temperatures near 128 degrees Fahrenheit in Mexico.

Hutchison – who describes herself as an “adventure seeker” – has carved out a career researching the giant crystals and speaking at conferences, lectures and renowned museums. She also has written a book about them that is in its second edition.

“My favorite part of my work is to pique people’s curiosity,” Hutchison says. “It’s rewarding to educate others about the mineralogy and geology of crystal growth, how they are formed and where they are found around the world.”

Miners who were drilling for silver in Naica, Mexico in April 2000 found a “bubble in the bedrock” nearly a 1,000 feet below ground: a cave of giant selenite crystals, a transparent colorless variety of gypsum.

Hutchison grew up hiking, climbing and exploring in the desert heat of El Paso, Texas and was also familiar with crystals from her work in hands-on healing. That experience, as well as connections she made from doing charitable work in the Chihuahua, Mexico area, made her a good candidate to join one of the first group of explorers of those crystals in January 2001.
Woman sits amidst sharp, huge crystals in a cave.
Hutchison, pictured above in 2001, used her skills as an avid rock climber to navigate sharp crystals inside the dark caves. Photo courtesy of Leela Hutchison
The conditions in the caves were “challenging and near fatal,” Hutchison says. “It was an extreme, hostile working environment … we were going into areas never discovered before and we didn’t know how far, deep and wide they were.”

Inside the caves, Hutchison examined and helped document the huge selenite crystals that are believed to be the largest in the world – approximately 40 feet tall and weighing as much as 60 tons.

“Seeing the crystals for the first time was like entering into Superman’s fortress of solitude, [with] colossal sized crystals on an exo-planet in the solar system, where the temperatures were exceedingly hot and I felt as if I were suffocating,” Hutchison says.

She was eager to share her experience with others after her journey into the caves, so Hutchison began to present information and photos on them. After “overwhelming” interest, she began speaking to more audiences – such as the Explorers Club and gem and mineral societies – and learning more about the crystals herself.

A few years later, in another desert, Hutchison embarked on a new adventure when she decided to attend the 2004 AGTA Gem Fair in Tucson, Arizona. Her uncle, a jeweler and watchmaker, had recently passed away and Hutchison was helping her cousin assess the loose gems he had collected. As she received her badge to enter the show, Hutchison says she saw the GIA booth, struck up a conversation and enrolled in the On Campus Graduate Gemologist program “right then and there.”

“That was the turning point in my career of a long-loved passion as an explorer and researcher of the largest crystals found on planet Earth,” Hutchison says.
Head shot of Leela Hutchison.
Hutchison, who earned her GIA GG diploma in 2005, says her fascination with the geology of the American Southwest led to a near-obsession for hiking deep into the canyons, mountain ranges and caves of the region as a rock hunter. Photo courtesy of Leela Hutchison
Hutchison’s research focuses on unexplained mysteries in the Chihuahuan desert and the caves, including understanding how the giant crystals were formed and whether there are more yet to be discovered. She believes there are more massive pockets of crystals that lay even deeper than the Naica mine.

“Many of my findings are from my own experiences in the Chihuahuan desert and from interviews (with experts), such as with Dr. Penelope Boston, director of astrobiology for NASA. She determined that microbes inside the crystals were over 60,000 years old and still alive, and did not match up in any database held by NASA,” Hutchison says. 

Although the caves have re-flooded and are no longer accessible – the mining operations that removed water from the caves has ceased – Hutchison continues to investigate the crystals by examining other deposits of selenite in the area. She shares her research findings at conferences and museums, including the Los Angeles Museum of Natural History in September 2017. She’s also been interviewed on several national radio programs.

Hutchison relies on strong communication skills to engage her audience, and credits her GIA education with giving her the knowledge to speak professionally about crystals, gems and minerals.

“Clear communication has helped to generate and build interest, excitement and enthusiasm in audiences worldwide,” she says. “(Before earning my GG) I did not have the ability to be knowledgeable or professional to share with people the extraordinary science of these newly discovered crystals.”
Huge crystals tower above and around woman in a dark cave.
This photo of Hutchison inside the caves, where the largest crystals are nearly 40 feet tall, was featured in Smithsonian magazine in April 2002. It is also the cover image of Hutchison’s book, a first-hand experience with images from her exploration. Photo courtesy of Leela Hutchison
The second edition of her book, “Journey Into the Giant Selenite Crystal Caves of Mexico,” was published in 2016. She also works individually with clients, acquiring gems and crystals for jewelry, their home or use in personal healing. Hutchison says her gemology education gave her credibility with clients and the knowledge to really understand what she was attempting to acquire, from “alexandrite to tanzanite.”

“Every year, when I attend the Tucson gem show and walk by the busy pavilion with new students wanting to enroll, I feel pride and gratitude in attending GIA,” she says. “My education was absolutely invaluable to my pursuit of interests, whether in gems or minerals.”

A year after her exploration of the giant crystals, a photo of Hutchison inside the caves was included in the April 2002 issue of Smithsonian magazine. It was an honor, Hutchison says, that came full circle at this year’s AGTA Gem Fair when she was asked to share her research with the Smithsonian Gem and Mineral Council.

“In the original article there was a quote by Dr. Jeffrey Post (chair of the department of mineral sciences for the Smithsonian Institution) and there he was in the audience as I presented to the Smithsonian,” Hutchison says. “It was really amazing, a top honor.”

Hutchison’s passion for the heart of her work – gems and minerals – remains strong. She recently spent time in Arkansas digging for quartz. A personal trip, she says, because “it’s fun to go into red clay and pull out beautiful crystals.”

She is equally passionate about building excitement about crystals, hoping to spark her audience’s interest – the way the crystals have captivated her for 17 years.
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Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Journey into the Giant Selenite Crystal Caves of Mexico 
by Leela Hutchison, G.G.

Dear Readers - welcome to the launching of my first blog site.   Many of you have heard of the Giant Crystals found in Mexico yet do not know of my being one in a first team of explorers into the caves in January 2001.  I wanted to launch a new blog for the internet since you are not subscribed to my email newsletter nor do you know of my pages on Facebook.  Yet!


Journey into the Giant Selenite Crystal Caves of Mexico by Leela Hutchison G.G.
Published September 2016
Now with rare color photographs

JOURNEY INTO THE GIANT SELENITE CRYSTAL CAVES OF MEXICO

APRIL 2018 NEWSLETTER


SANTA CRUZ CA GEM AND MINERAL SOCIETY PRESENTS:
SANTA CRUZ CA GEM AND MINERAL SOCIETY


WIZARD HOLDING A MAGIC CRYSTAL!

April - 2018
Dear Friend of the Giant Selenite Crystal Caves of Mexico!
Greetings! You are receiving this newsletter because we have met over the years at lectures and conferences. You were piqued by your interest in the largest crystals ever discovered on earth! Their immense size and beauty were presented to the world by a few miners, researchers, scientists and explorers who were courageous and curious to enter into a subterranean hostile environment to gain a better understanding of what information these crystals hold about our earth! Humans are AMAZING in their desire to go beyond their physical limits!
Santa Cruz Gem and Mineral Society

WIZARDS AND CRYSTALS!
Nikola Tesla was also curious about the wonders of the life of a crystal. I am excited to share that at the end of April, I will be lecturing and presenting images of the Journey into the Giant Selenite Crystal Caves to the 67th Annual Show of the Santa Cruz California Gem and Mineral Society! This show's theme is Wizards Crystals and Treasure for the children and I can't wait to have these young seekers check out the massive crystals. If you live in NorCal, I hope you will join me, as I will be selling beautiful window selenite specimens and books both the 28th and 29th of April.
Here is First Grader Hazyl asking me four questions for her school report! Isn't she adorable?
Six Year Old Hazyl's Four Questions

LE MONTAGNE DES CRISTALLIERS

THe Mountain of the Crystal Diggers
 I wanted to share with you the new documentary movie trailer coming out about Chamonix France and La Montagne des Cristalliers Its about The Mountain of the Crystal Diggers | Outdoor Documentary | Official Trailer
CLICK ON THE IMAGE ABOVE THAT WILL TAKE YOU TO YOUTUBE!
“Crystal Digging is an important part of the history of Chamonix’s Valley, France. The Mountain of Crystal Diggers is the story of a team of french men whose hikes and climbs come with a mission : a treasure hunt and a heritage preservation.
As they look for cracks along the cliffs, they discover an exceptional quartz pocket in the mountains of Chamonix. Beyond a mountaineering exploit, this documentary shows a different of way of life in the mountain and is the testimony of these men’s true passion.”
AND CHECK THIS BEAUTY OUT!
Chamonix Valley Crystal Digger
My great interest and passion is about Selenite Crystals of course, but quartz crystal growt
h and formation is my second love! This double terminated quartz crystal came from one of the "pocket ovens" in the high mountains of the Chamonix Valley in France by these amazing rock climbers that carry on in fine form a tradition of climbers for generations.
NEW! Now in SPANISH

Un Viaje a las Cuevas de Cristales Gigantes de Selenita de Mexico: Los cristales más grandes descubiertos en el planeta tierra

The Journey into the Giant Selenite Crystal Caves of Mexico is now translated into Spanish! This month I sold my first book to a Mexican/American woman from Mountain View, California. She wrote to me after reading the book and said: "I am so impressed with all you have done with your career and you have that magic to take people with the imagination, I can see and feel every [adventure] you have taken! It Is an amazing book and I think more people need to know about this special place, especially the Mexicans".
Un Viaje a Las Cuevas...
This is a dream come true for me and of interest for many of the people I have met through my adventures in Mexico, Central America and Peru.
Please, will you forward this newsletter onto your friends and family members who would take an interest?
SPANISH EDITION NOW AN E BOOK!
As of today, the Spanish version of my book: Journey into the Giant Selenite Crystal Caves of Mexico is offered as an electronic version on Kindle! Hoping that libraries, schools and institutions may want to offer the story and images to their students of natural history, and geology.
KINDLE E BOOK in SPANISH

Available on Amazon -



Any questions or comments, please feel free to email me at:

leelasgems@yahoo.com

Thank for your continued interest in my lectures and presentations! And special thank you for all that have purchased my books thru Amazon or personally meeting each other at conferences/trade shows etc. I have been blessed to have met so many of you with great passion and curiosity about minerals and gems. Keep it up! There are more adventures awaiting for you! May you be richly blessed on your journey thru life!

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Journey into the Giant Selenite Crystal Caves of Mexico

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