The  crystal skulls are a number of human skull hardstone carvings made of  clear or milky quartz rock, known in art history as "rock crystal",  claimed to be pre-Columbian Mesoamerican artifacts by their alleged  finders. However, none of the specimens made available for scientific  study have been authenticated as pre-Columbian in origin. The results of  these studies demonstrated that those examined were manufactured in the  mid-19th century or later, almost certainly in Europe. Despite some  claims presented in an assortment of popularizing literature, legends of  crystal skulls with mystical powers do not figure in genuine  Mesoamerican or other Native American mythologies and spiritual  accounts.
The skulls are often claimed to exhibit paranormal phenomena by some  members of the New Age movement, and have often been portrayed as such  in fiction. Crystal skulls have been a popular subject appearing in  numerous sci-fi television series,novels,and video games.
Crystal skull collections:
A distinction has been made by some modern researchers between the  smaller bead-sized crystal skulls, which first appear in the mid-19th  century, and the larger (approximately life-sized) skulls that appear  toward the end of that century.The larger crystal skulls have attracted  nearly all the popular attention in recent times, and some researchers  believe that all of these have been manufactured as forgeries in Europe.
Trade in fake pre-Columbian artifacts developed during the late 19th century to the extent that in 1886, Smithsonian archaeologist William Henry Holmes wrote an article called "The Trade in Spurious Mexican Antiquities" for Science. Although museums had acquired skulls earlier, it was Eugène Boban,  an antiquities dealer who opened his shop in Paris in 1870, who is most  associated with 19th-century museum collections of crystal skulls. Most  of Boban's collection, including three crystal skulls, was sold to the ethnographer Alphonse Pinart, who donated the collection to the Trocadéro Museum, which later became the Musée de l'Homme 
Research into crystal skull origins:
Many crystal skulls are claimed to be pre-Columbian, usually attributed  to the Aztec or Maya civilizations. Mesoamerican art has numerous  representations of skulls, but none of the skulls in museum collections  come from documented excavations. Research carried out on several  crystal skulls at the British Museum in 1967, 1996 and again in 2004 has  shown that the indented lines marking the teeth (for these skulls had  no separate jawbone, unlike the Mitchell-Hedges skull) were carved using  jeweler's equipment (rotary tools) developed in the 19th century,  making a supposed pre-Columbian origin problematic.
The type of crystal  was determined by examination of chlorite inclusions, and is only to be  found in Madagascar and Brazil, and thus unobtainable or unknown within  pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. The study concluded that the skulls were  crafted in the 19th century in Germany, quite likely at workshops in the  town of Idar-Oberstein renowned for crafting objects made from imported  Brazilian quartz at this period in the late 19th century.
It has been established that both the British Museum and Paris's Musée  de l'Homme crystal skulls were originally sold by the French antiquities  dealer Eugène Boban, who was operating in Mexico City between 1860 and  1880. The British Museum crystal skull transited through New York's  Tiffany's, whilst the Musée de l'Homme's crystal skull was donated by  Alphonse Pinart, an ethnographer who had bought it from Boban.
An investigation carried out by the Smithsonian Institution in 1992 on a  crystal skull provided by an anonymous source who claimed to have  purchased it in Mexico City in 1960 and that it was of Aztec origin  concluded that it, too, was made in recent years. According to the  Smithsonian, Boban acquired the crystal skulls he sold from sources in  Germany – findings that are in keeping with those of the British Museum.
A detailed study of the British Museum and Smithsonian crystal skulls  was accepted for publication by the Journal of Archaeological Science in  May 2008. Using electron microscopy and X-ray crystallography, a team  of British and American researchers found that the British Museum skull  was worked with a harsh abrasive substance such as corundum or diamond,  and shaped using a rotary disc tool made from some suitable metal.
The  Smithsonian specimen had been worked with a different abrasive, namely  the silicon-carbon compound carborundum which is a synthetic substance  manufactured using modern industrial techniques.Since the synthesis of  carborundum dates only to the 1890s and its wider availability to the  20th century, the researchers concluded "he suggestion is that it was  made in the 1950s or later".
Speculations on smaller skulls:
None of the skulls in museums come from documented excavations. A  parallel example is provided by obsidian mirrors, ritual objects widely  depicted in Aztec art. Although a few surviving obsidian mirrors come  from archaeological excavations, none of the Aztec-style obsidian  mirrors are so documented. Yet most authorities on Aztec material  culture consider the Aztec-style obsidian mirrors as authentic  pre-Columbian objects.
Archaeologist Michael E. Smith reports a non  peer-reviewed find of a small crystal skull at an Aztec site in the  Valley of Mexico.Crystal skulls have been described as "A fascinating  example of artifacts that have made their way into museums with no  scientific evidence to prove their rumored pre-Columbian origins." A  similar case is the "Olmec-style" face mask in jade; hardstone carvings  of a face in a mask form. Curators and scholars refer to these as  "Olmec-style", as to date no example has been recovered in an  archaeologically controlled Olmec context, although they appear Olmec in  style.
However they have been recovered from sites of other cultures,  including one deliberately deposited in the ceremonial precinct of  Tenochtitlan (Mexico City), which would presumably have been about 2,000  years old when the Aztecs buried it, suggesting these were as valued  and collected as Roman antiquities were in Europe. 
 Perhaps the most famous and enigmatic skull was allegedly discovered in  1924 by Anna Le Guillon Mitchell-Hedges, adopted daughter of British  adventurer and popularist author F.A. Mitchell-Hedges. It is the subject  of a video documentary made in 1990, Crystal Skull of Lubaantun. It has  been noted upon examination by Smithsonian researchers to be "very  nearly a replica of the British Museum skull--almost exactly the same  shape, but with more detailed modeling of the eyes and the teeth." Anna  Hedges claimed that she found the skull buried under a collapsed altar  inside a temple in Lubaantun, in British Honduras, now Belize. As far as  can be ascertained, F.A. Mitchell-Hedges himself made no mention of the  alleged discovery in any of his writings on Lubaantun. Also, others  present at the time of the excavation have not been documented as noting  either the skull's discovery or Anna's presence at the dig.
In a 1970 letter, Anna also stated that she was, "told by the few  remaining Maya that the skull was used by the high priest to will  death."For this reason, the artifact is sometimes referred to as "The  Skull of Doom". An alternative explanation[who?] is a play on 'Skull of  Dunn' (Dunn being an associate of Mitchell-Hedges)[citation needed].  Anna Mitchell-Hedges toured with the skull from 1967 exhibiting it on a  pay-per-view basis, and she continued to give interviews about the  artifact until her death in 2007.
The skull is made from a block of clear quartz about the size of a small  human cranium, measuring some 5 inches (13 cm) high, 7 inches (18 cm)  long and 5 inches wide. The lower jaw is detached. In the early 1970s it  came under the temporary care of freelance art restorer Frank Dorland,  who claimed upon inspecting it that it had been "carved" with total  disregard to the natural crystal axes without the use of metal tools.
Dorland reported being unable to find any tell-tale scratch marks,  except for traces of mechanical grinding on the teeth, and he speculated  that it was first chiseled into rough form, probably using diamonds,  and the finer shaping, grinding and polishing was achieved through the  use of sand over a period of 150 to 300 years. He said it could be up to  12,000 years old. Although various claims have been made over the years  regarding the skull's physical properties, such as an allegedly  constant temperature of 70 °F (21 °C), Dorland reported that there was  no difference in properties between it and other natural quartz  crystals. 
While in Dorland's care the skull came to the attention of writer  Richard Garvin, at the time working at an advertising agency where he  supervised Hewlett-Packard's advertising account. Garvin made  arrangements for the skull to be examined at HP's crystal labs at Santa  Clara, where it was subjected to several tests. The labs determined only  that it was not a composite (as Dorland had supposed), but that it was  fashioned from a single crystal of quartz. The lab test also established  that the lower jaw had been fashioned from the same left-handed growing  crystal as the rest of the skull. No investigation was made by HP as to  its method of manufacture or dating.
As well as the traces of mechanical grinding on the teeth noted by  Dorland, Mayanist archaeologist Norman Hammond reported that the holes  (presumed to be intended for support pegs) showed signs of being made by  drilling with metal. Anna Mitchell-Hedges refused subsequent requests  to submit the skull for further scientific testing.
F. A. Mitchell-Hedges mentioned the skull only briefly in the first  edition of his autobiography, Danger My Ally (1954), without specifying  where or by whom it was found.He merely claimed that "it is at least  3,600 years old and according to legend it was used by the High Priest  of the Maya when he was performing esoteric rites. It is said that when  he willed death with the help of the skull, death invariably followed".  All subsequent editions of Danger My Ally omitted mention of the skull  entirely.
Eugène Boban, main French dealer in pre-Columbian artifacts during the  second half of the 19th century and probable source of many famous  skullsThe earliest published reference to the skull is the July 1936  issue of the British anthropological journal Man, where it is described  as being in the possession of Mr. Sydney Burney, a London art dealer who  is said to have owned it since 1933. No mention was made of  Mitchell-Hedges. There is documentary evidence that Mitchell-Hedges  bought it from Burney in 1944. The skull was in the custody of Anna  Mitchell-Hedges, the adopted daughter of Frederick. She steadfastly  refused to let it be examined by experts (making very doubtful the claim  that it was reported on by R. Stansmore Nutting in 1962). Somewhere  between 1988–1990 Anna Mitchell-Hedges toured with the skull.
In her last eight years, Anna Mitchell-Hedges lived in Chesterton,  Indiana, with Bill Homann, whom she married in 2002. She died on April  11, 2007. Since that time the Mitchell-Hedges Skull has been in the  custody of Bill Homann. In April 2009, Five, a UK television channel,  took the story and revealed that the Mitchell-Hedges Skull, recently  tested under a special microscope in the Smithsonian Institution, had  been manufactured with tools that Aztecs and Mayans simply did not have.  Like the other skulls, this one is a fabrication dating from the second  half of the 19th century. Bill Homann however continues to believe in  its mystical properties. 
British Museum skull: The  crystal skull of the British Museum first appeared in 1881, in the shop  of the Paris antiquarian, Eugène Boban. Its origin was not stated in  his catalog of the time. He is said to have tried to sell it to Mexico's  national museum as an Aztec artifact, but was unsuccessful. Boban later  moved his business to New York City, where the skull was sold to George  H. Sisson. It was exhibited at the meeting of the American Association  for the Advancement of Science in New York City in 1887 by George F.  Kunz.[38] It was sold at auction, and bought by Tiffany and Co., who  later sold it at cost to the British Museum in 1897.[39] This skull is  very similar to the Mitchell-Hedges skull, although it is less detailed  and does not have a movable lower jaw.
The  British Museum catalogues the skull's provenance as "probably European,  19th century AD"and describes it as "not an authentic pre-Columbian  artefact". It has been established that this skull was made with modern  tools, and that it is not authentic.
Paris skull:The largest of the three skulls sold by  Eugène Boban to Alphonse Pinart (sometimes called the Paris Skull),  about 10 cm (4 in) high, has a hole drilled vertically through its  center.It is part of a collection held at the Musée du Quai Branly, and  was subjected to scientific tests carried out in 2007–08 by France's  national Centre de recherche et de restauration des musées de France  (Centre for Research and Restoration of the Museums in France, or  C2RMF). After a series of analyses carried out over three months, C2RMF  engineers concluded that it was "certainly not pre-Columbian, it shows  traces of polishing and abrasion by modern tools."Particle accelerator  tests also revealed occluded traces of water that were dated to the 19th  century, and the Quai Branly released a statement that the tests "seem  to indicate that it was made late in the 19th century."
In 2009 the C2RMF researchers published results of further investigations to establish when the Paris skull had been carved. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis indicated the use of lapidary machine tools in its carving. The results of a new dating technique known as quartz hydration dating (QHD) demonstrated that the Paris skull had been carved later than a reference quartz specimen artifact, known to have been cut in 1740. The researchers conclude that the SEM and QHD results combined with the skull's known provenance indicate it was carved in the 18th or 19th century.
Smithsonian Skull:The "Smithsonian Skull" was mailed to the Smithsonian Institution anonymously in 1992, and was claimed to be an Aztec object by its donor and was purportedly from the collection of Porfirio Diaz. It is the largest of the skulls, weighing 31 pounds and is 15 inches high. It was carved using carborundum, a modern abrasive. It has been displayed as a fake at the National Museum of Natural History.
In 2009 the C2RMF researchers published results of further investigations to establish when the Paris skull had been carved. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis indicated the use of lapidary machine tools in its carving. The results of a new dating technique known as quartz hydration dating (QHD) demonstrated that the Paris skull had been carved later than a reference quartz specimen artifact, known to have been cut in 1740. The researchers conclude that the SEM and QHD results combined with the skull's known provenance indicate it was carved in the 18th or 19th century.
Smithsonian Skull:The "Smithsonian Skull" was mailed to the Smithsonian Institution anonymously in 1992, and was claimed to be an Aztec object by its donor and was purportedly from the collection of Porfirio Diaz. It is the largest of the skulls, weighing 31 pounds and is 15 inches high. It was carved using carborundum, a modern abrasive. It has been displayed as a fake at the National Museum of Natural History.
Paranormal claims and spiritual associations
Some  believers in the paranormal claim that crystal skulls can produce a  variety of miracles. Ann Mitchell-Hedges claimed that the skull she  allegedly discovered could cause visions, cure cancer, that she once  used its magical properties to kill a man, and that in another instance,  she saw in it a premonition of the John F. Kennedy assassination. In  the 1931 play The Satin Slipper, by Paul Claudel, King Philip II of  Spain uses "a death's head made from a single piece of rock crystal,"  lit by "a ray of the setting sun," to see the defeat of his Armada in  its attack on England (day 4, scene 4, pp. 243–44).
Claims of the healing and supernatural powers of crystal skulls have no  support in the scientific community, which has found no evidence of any  unusual phenomena associated with the skulls nor any reason for further  investigation, other than the confirmation of their provenance and  method of manufacture.
Another novel and historically unfounded speculation ties in the legend  of the crystal skulls with the completion of the current Maya calendar  b'ak'tun-cycle on December 21, 2012, claiming the re-uniting of the  thirteen mystical skulls will forestall a catastrophe allegedly  predicted or implied by the ending of this calendar. An airing of this  claim appeared (among an assortment of others made) in The Mystery of  the Crystal Skulls, a 2008 program produced for the Sci Fi Channel in  May and shown on Discovery Channel Canada in June. Interviewees included  Richard Hoagland, who attempted to link the skulls and the Maya to life  on Mars, and David Hatcher Childress, proponent of lost Atlantean  civilizations and anti-gravity claims.
Crystal skulls are also referenced by author Drunvalo Melchizedek in his  book Serpent of Light.He writes that he came across indigenous Mayan  descendants in possession of crystal skulls at ceremonies at temples in  the Yucatán, which he writes contained souls of ancient Mayans who had  entered the skulls to await the time when their ancient knowledge would  once again be required.
The alleged associations and origins of crystal skull mythology in  Native American spiritual lore, as advanced by neoshamanic writers such  as Jamie Sams, are similarly discounted. Instead, as Philip Jenkins  notes, crystal skull mythology may be traced back to the "baroque  legends" initially spread by F.A. Mitchell-Hedges, and then afterwards  taken up:
By the 1970s, the crystal skulls [had] entered New Age mythology as  potent relics of ancient Atlantis, and they even acquired a canonical  number: there were exactly thirteen skulls.
None of this would have anything to do with North American Indian  matters, if the skulls had not attracted the attention of some of the  most active New Age writers.
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