| Catlinite 
                   The 
                    Real McCoy!  
                   The 
                    soft red stone which comes from the sacred quarries in Pipestone, 
                    is scientifically known as Catlinite. It feels smooth to the 
                    touch, and is easily carved with a regular pen-knife. Most 
                    Catlinite is not pure red all the way through, it normally 
                    has small lighter pigments scattered in the dark red, these 
                    are known as stars, and the markings can often look like a 
                    universe in the making. 
                   
                     
                      |  1 |  2 |  3 |   
                      | The 
                          picture above is of raw pipestone as it comes out of 
                          the earth. As you can see it looks nothing like the 
                          finished stone. | Once 
                          the stone is cut it looks like the above picture, you 
                          can see the lighter specks in the stone. | This 
                          is what the polished stone looks like, this has beeswax 
                          on it to give it a shine. |  Take 
                    a look at picture 2 above, this is how the stone can look 
                    with the lighter spots in it. These markings come from the 
                    bleaching of the hematite in the metamorphic clay over the 
                    centuries. It is nature at it's finest, the lighter areas 
                    can often look like an animal, a bird, or an insect. Sometimes 
                    a different type of picture can show such as a shell, a human, 
                    a tree. You just need to look into the color to see these 
                    shapes.  
                   
 Pictures 
                    in the Stone 
 
                     
                      | In 
                          2001, Chuck carved a Pipe for a Canadian Native American. 
                          As he looked for a piece of stone to use, four times 
                          this piece insisted that it be used, he turned it down 
                          three times as he didn't think it would be big enough, 
                          and on the fourth realized that it should be used. As 
                          he carved the Pipe the following image came through: 
                          Is this a Canada Goose? We thought so.  |  |   
                      |  | This 
                          shows that the pictures are there for a reason, and 
                          they want to come out in the Pipe. Spirit IS in the 
                          genuine Catlinite stone. This is shown in the early 
                          stage of carving. We took the photo early on in the 
                          process because we thought the picture would be carved 
                          out. However it wasn't the goose stayed and is happily 
                          with it's new owner in Canada.  |  
 
                     
                      |  | In 
                          2003 a pipe was crafted for a Native American woman's 
                          group, who are commemorating their ancestors of 1862. 
                          When the markings in this pipe was shown to me I recognised 
                          the shape as one of the photos I had seen from 1862. 
                          The Pipe was presented to the group with the original 
                          photo (picture is on the left) showing the young pregnant 
                          woman who appeared in the stone. Dakota 
                          Womans March     Photograph 
                          courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society |  You 
                    can see by the pictures above the various colors in the stone. 
                    The finished color looks completely different to the raw stone 
                    shown in pictures 1 and 2. Many people think that the stone 
                    comes out red like this. In the old days the polish used was 
                    buffalo tallow.
                  
                  
                   Another 
                    phenomena that shows itself is what the crafts-people call 
                    a heart-line. It is a hair-thick line that is straight and 
                    a different color, (usually black,) to the stone. It looks 
                    like a crack but it isn't. If one of these is found in the 
                    stone, it is thought to be highly lucky for both the crafts-person 
                    and the person who ends up with the item it is in. 
                     
                   
 
                     
                      | The 
                          scientific breakdown of Catlinite
                        
                         Silica------------- 
                          48.20 Mangananous Oxide------------ 0.60 Ferric Oxide----------- 5.00  Magnesia---------------- 
                          6.00
 Alumina------------ 28.20 Water----------------- 
                          8.40
 Carbonate of Lime ---------------- 2.60 Loss----------------------- 
                          1.00
 Analysis 
                          by Dr. Charles F. Jackson, Boston chemist. circa 
                          1836  Catlinite 
                          is chemically a clay (silicate of alumina) colored brick 
                          red with peroxide of iron. In 
                          a museum article it was said that Indians preferred 
                          this more pure clay over other red stone found else 
                          where, and that the jasper stone had more quartz in 
                          it.  |  
  The 
                    look-alike stone: The 
                    non-native quarries are near the tiny town of Jasper, these 
                    are privately owned quarries, where stone that looks like 
                    Catlinite is obtained. The man who owned one of the quarries 
                    proudly stated a few years ago that he supplied 95% of all 
                    pipestone sold. The reason that he could do this is because 
                    he got to the stone by using machinery and so could get out 
                    hundreds of pounds at a time. The problem is that this stone 
                    is not pipestone even though it was advertised as being from 
                    the quarries in SW Minnesota. Of course that quarry is in 
                    SW Minnesota as well as the sacred quarries, so it made it 
                    look like the stone comes from the Native American quarries. 
                    Now think about this for a minute, if he was selling 95% of 
                    all stone sold back then and we didn't know about it how many 
                    people obtained stone that they thought was the sacred stone, 
                    only to find out that is wasn't. How many people bought that 
                    stone to keep as an heirloom or to keep on an alter? That 
                    stone is probably still there now, and the poor person doesn't 
                    realize it is not genuine stone from the sacred quarries...... 
                    That is fine in a way, but in another way it isn't because 
                    it was sold under false pretences as something sacred..... 
                    It may interest you to know that the man who was selling all 
                    of this stone eventually lost a couple of fingers, so Creator 
                    did do something about it. He has since sold his business 
                    and the stone is still being sold, mostly on Ebay, so please 
                    be careful where you get yours from......  The 
                    Jasper stone as it is called (please note that this is 
                    not the gemstone called Jasper) feels grittier, it doesn't 
                    have that smooth buttery feel that the Catlinite does. If 
                    you try to cut it with a knife it cracks away, often it breaks 
                    as it is being crafted, or it breaks the craftspersons tools. 
                    The color is different too, it has a more purple look to it. 
                    The chemical make up of the stone has more quartz in it. This 
                    is the reason that it doesn't cut as well as Pipestone. It 
                    also has a more metalic taste to it. The 
                    biggest difference is the dust, Catlinite dust has healing 
                    qualities, the other stone does not. Pipestone craftspeople 
                    have for many years been working with the dust all around 
                    them. Never do they use a face mask, and never have they had 
                    any lung problems. A couple of women have astma, but they 
                    still make craft items and it doesn't cause them to have an 
                    attack. When you go to a craftspersons home there is always 
                    pink dust around from their work over the years. It does no 
                    harm. However, we have seen people using the other stone and 
                    they use a mask, because the dust is sharper and can cause 
                    lung problems. We 
                    have also heard that the dust causes the skin to burn in the 
                    sun, but the true stone dust is used by sundancers to protect 
                    their skin, a big difference wouldn't you think? Lately 
                    I have been calling the false stone 'Fool's Stone' which is 
                    in the same concept of 'Fool's Gold', so much of the gold 
                    mined in the late 1800's was Fool's Gold, but the miners thought 
                    it was real gold. This stone is the same, many people think 
                    it is the real Catlinite, and they try to make Ceremonial 
                    items from it. Sometimes if they are lucky the stone can be 
                    formed into a Pipe, but we have heard more than once that 
                    the ceremonies have gone wrong. I would personally say that 
                    is because Spirit is not in the Fool's Stone. It is like a 
                    Heyoka stone, causing things to go contrary to how they should. 
                     More 
                    and more Natives are coming and telling us about the stone 
                    they were gifted or got from a store to make a channupa from 
                    only to find it cracked and they couldn't do it. There are 
                    many angry people out there right now who want something done 
                    about the people selling this stone as Pipestone stone. Native 
                    Americans have had enough of this issue.  
 1. 
                    To end this page I wish to reiterate that no-one from the 
                    Original Pipestone Dakota Tiospaye is making a lot of money 
                    through the stone. What is sold is recompense for their time 
                    in quarrying and making the item.  2. 
                    The Pipestone quarries are not being desecrated by the quarriers 
                    or anyone else. 3. 
                    There are no tourists running around tearing down trees or 
                    plants or acting disrespectful in the Pipestone Monument area. 
                    When people walk into the Sacred area it is as if a peacefulness 
                    overcomes them and they walk quietly, with respect. They ask 
                    questions when they see a Native American in very quiet tones, 
                    and seem to understand that the whole place has a magical 
                    (Wakan) quality to it which they cannot explain but know it's 
                    there. Recently an email came in from a visitor to Pipestone 
                    and I am quoting it here because it says it all..... 'My 
                    first impressions was that it (The National Monument) was 
                    a very low key place, quiet, warm in the late summer breezes 
                    and, as I think about it now it had an ethereal presence. 
                    Kind of like walking into a church sanctuary on a Saturday 
                    afternoon when no one is there. ' R W-W.  
                    4. Energies do not subside over the years, the power that 
                    the ancients felt here is still present, and it always will 
                    be here. Primitive energies that make things happen.  To 
                    see photos of the actual false quarries and the ancient quarry 
                    please go HERE. and HERE. 
                     
                   
 If 
                    you have obtained some red stone from a rock shop or E-Bay 
                    please be aware that it is almost certainly NOT 
                    from the ancient Pipestone Quarries.  
                    If you paid less than $10 a pound for it then again it has 
                    most likely not been hand quarries by a Native American. 
                     Even 
                    if you bought the stone from a Native American that is not 
                    a valid reason to say that it is genuine Catlinite. We know 
                    of one Native man who got his permit then stocked up with 
                    the false stone and went back to his home state to sell the 
                    stone. He had a permit, he had red stone, but that stone was 
                    not true pipestone. |