I’m going to preface this post by saying that this does not appear to be common – and that Pyrite does naturally occur with Amethyst.
This post is written as a reminder to look a little closer.
This could be an art piece, a one off. I just don’t know. I saw it online and thought it looked a little iffy, but it was cheap and I actually think its pretty, too. It’s a fairly good quality piece of Amethyst and would probably have sold for more than the £5 I paid for it.
It doesn’t look horribly unrealistic on first glance, although there are a couple of bits you can see are quite iffy with just ‘regular eyesight’. In photo one, you can see a chip has come off the outer shell, middle right. This has Pyrite granules covering it.
While plausible, it is unlikely the base Amethyst would have sustained this damage and then had an additional mineral grow on top. Same with the position of the large granular crystal in the top centre of the piece, next to the fragment. If intact when mined, these Pyrite crystals would have been inside the shell of the geode.
When you look a little closer, it becomes a little more obvious. A UV light or bright light will show another substance between the Pyrite and Amethyst, and while technically possible that it is a mineral, it is pretty obvious that it is glue. When prodded with a metal spike the substance moved and rebounded as cured adhesives tend to.
When magnified, we can quite clearly see an adhesive; in fact, this piece even had a couple of small hairs set into the glue itself. I did give them a quick wipe to check they weren’t my own…
In the photos below, the tan/buff coloured substance is an adhesive fixing the Pyrite to the Amethyst, I’ve tried to indicate it with a spike but under 20x magnification it is a little difficult to coordinate.
Anyway, yeah – not a common fake, and a fairly decent looking one, too.
I don’t know about the piece you’re showing in the article above, but I recently purchased a piece of amethyst COVERED in pyrite. I was curious whether or not pyrite could be melted and used to coat other crystals, which is how I found your article. I used a $65, very long black light I have to see if there was any type of irregular UV glow between the pyrite and amethyst, (as mentioned above may be the case with stones like this) and there’s no glow to the stone at all. (As if a glue or sticky residue were used.) While it might be less common for these two types of stones to grow together, it’s not impossible. I don’t know what else the gold on top of mine could possibly be if not pyrite. I have quite a few other stones from Bulgaria that are with Pyrite and another silver type of stone. They are both known to grow in very geometric patterns, but I don’t recall the name of the silver/metallic type of stone. I really don’t like stones that have been chemically, artificially, artistically or otherwise altered so I would like to know if my stone is fake, so I can resell it if it is. I have no need for anything that isn’t 100% natural and unaltered. if you could email me to give me your opinion, I would greatly appreciate it. I will post a YouTube link below so you can look at the specimen, if you wish. Thank you.
Without looking in person its hard to say, but I suspect yours is legitimate. It might be worth having a look through the photos on Mindat for any similar pieceS: https://www.mindat.org/photoscroll.php?searchbox=Amethyst+with+Pyrite