Emerald from the Habach valley—Habachtal in German—is one of the few emeralds whose locality is as famous among field collectors as among gem historians. The deposit sits high on the eastern side of the valley in the Hohe Tauern of Salzburg, above Bramberg am Wildkogel, in the steep Leckbachgraben or Leckbachrinne below the Leckbachscharte. It is a thoroughly Alpine emerald: crystals in dark, glittering biotite schist, tremolite-actinolite schist, talc schist, chlorite-rich rocks, and related blackwall zones, formed where beryllium-bearing fluids met chromium-bearing ultramafic rocks during Alpine regional metamorphism.

Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Visually, a fine Habachtal specimen has a character collectors recognize immediately: a hexagonal green to bluish green prism set against silvery black mica schist. The contrast is part of the charm. Even modest crystals can be attractive when they are sharply exposed on matrix, and the best specimens combine a saturated Alpine green, distinct prism faces, and enough translucency to glow from within. The locality also produces pale green beryl and gray to blue beryl approaching aquamarine; true emerald color is controlled principally by chromium with iron also present.
Habachtal’s historical importance rests on two overlapping reputations. First, it is the classic European emerald occurrence, known in mineralogical literature since the late eighteenth century and repeatedly worked—usually with more hope than profit—from the nineteenth century onward. Second, it has figured in debates over the origin of ancient and medieval emeralds before the Colombian sources entered European gem commerce. Egyptian emerald and Austrian Habachtal emerald are the two historical localities most often discussed in that context, although the documentary and archaeological record for ancient mining at Habachtal remains contested.
For collectors, the locality is less about large cut stones than about mineral specimens. Most material is included, fractured, or too small for faceting. That limitation is exactly why matrix specimens are so desirable: a Habachtal emerald with its original biotite-schist setting preserves the geological story better than a small cut stone ever could. The best pieces show a single, well-positioned crystal from about 1 to 3 cm, or a group of smaller crystals, standing out cleanly from the dark host. Exceptional gemmy crystals are genuinely rare.
Search for specimens: View all emerald specimens from Habach valley, Austria
The Habachtal emerald deposit lies in a rugged side gully above the main Habach valley, on the Nasenkopf side of the valley in the Hohe Tauern, Salzburg. The classic collecting and mining name is Leckbachgraben or Leckbachrinne; older spellings and historical accounts also use variants such as Legbach, Gleckbach, Heubachtal, or Sedl. The mine workings are high alpine workings, with galleries around roughly 2,100–2,200 m elevation.
Geologically, this is a schist-hosted emerald occurrence associated with the Tauern Window. The emerald-bearing zone is near the tectonic contact between Zentralgneis-related orthogneisses and rocks of the Habach Formation. The emeralds occur in a strongly deformed shear and reaction zone involving serpentinite, talc schist, biotite schist, chlorite schist, amphibole-bearing schists, and related gneisses. The essential recipe was the meeting of beryllium and chromium in a metamorphic, metasomatic setting rather than the simple margin of a pegmatite. Modern classifications place the deposit among metamorphically remobilized schist-type emerald deposits.
The first secure printed scientific notice of the Habachtal emerald occurrence was Kaspar Melchior Balthasar Schroll’s 1797 description of a prismatic emerald crystal in mica schist. Jakob Frischholz, the Munich mineral dealer, visited and described the locality in 1821, by which time the deposit had already attracted serious mineralogical attention. By 1859, Zepharovich’s work in the mineralogical literature helped focus renewed attention on the occurrence, and careful searching yielded additional fine stones.
The first systematic nineteenth-century exploitation began with Samuel Goldschmidt, a Viennese jeweler. After exploration in 1861, he purchased the emerald-bearing ground from the Austrian state in 1862 and began working the Leckbachrinne material. Early work included open-pit extraction and then tunneling. Goldschmidt’s enterprise produced matrix specimens attractive to collectors, but not enough high-quality facet rough to sustain large-scale gemstone mining. After his death, the property passed through family and leased arrangements before entering a more ambitious English phase.
From 1896, the property was controlled by Emerald Mines Limited, initially connected with London diamond merchants. The English period saw work in several galleries, summer mining seasons, and ambitious hopes, but it too struggled against the fundamental problem of the deposit: emerald was present, but only a small fraction was clean enough to cut. By 1913, after liabilities and legal troubles, the mine returned to public ownership, and ownership then passed through local and private hands. Later episodes involved proposals for talc and beryl as industrial products as well as emerald recovery, but repeated business plans were stronger on optimism than on profitable gem output.
Modern activity is small scale. Since 1985 the mine has been maintained by the Steiner family of Bramberg; since 2001, Alois Steiner and Andreas Steiner have overseen work. Operations are seasonal, typically in the short high-alpine window from mid-June into September or October, and involve only a small crew. Material is sold chiefly as mineral specimens, with limited rough used for jewelry.
Collecting access must be understood carefully. The mine itself is private and is not open to the public. The upper Leckbachrinne is steep, unstable, and exposed to rockfall; official visitor information specifically warns against climbing to the mine area. However, erosion, landslides, and especially the large 2002 debris flow moved emerald-bearing material downhill into the lower search area. Visitors commonly search and wash gravel below the gully near the Alpenrose area, where tools may be rented seasonally. The distinction matters: searching washed-down material in the accessible lower area is a long-standing visitor activity, while entering the mine or climbing the upper gully is not.
Habachtal emeralds most often occur as hexagonal prismatic beryl crystals in mica-rich schist. Collectors should expect the classic prismatic habit rather than showy Colombian-style gem crystals in calcite veins. Matrix pieces commonly show a green crystal emerging from or lying along lustrous dark biotite schist, sometimes with talc, chlorite, amphibole, quartz, feldspar, or phengitic mica in the host.
Color ranges from pale green through attractive medium green to darker bluish green. Many crystals are slightly bluish or grayish, and some beryl from the locality grades toward aquamarine or non-emerald green beryl. The most desirable emerald specimens are those with a true saturated green color, a visible hexagonal outline, and at least partial translucency. A bright green crystal on sharply contrasting black schist is the signature collector look.
Typical individual crystals encountered by field collectors are small—millimetric chips, fragments, and slender prisms. Studied samples in modern gemological work range from 1 mm to 25 mm. Matrix specimens with crystals around 1–2 cm are already good; sharp, attractive crystals above 2 cm are distinctly better; gemmy, clean crystals of several centimeters are exceptional. Historical and museum pieces document the upper end: a 3.3 cm, 82 ct crystal sold to the British Museum in 1883; a 4.5 cm, 128 ct gem-quality crystal found in the mid-1970s; and the celebrated “Madonna emerald,” an approximately 30 cm tall matrix specimen found in 1970 and displayed at the Bramberg Museum.
The internal world of Habachtal emerald is highly diagnostic. The locality is known for abundant mineral inclusions, especially actinolite or tremolite-actinolite needles and biotite or phlogopite mica sheets. Quartz, feldspar or albite, apatite, epidote, chlorite, calcite, tourmaline, rutile, titanite, pyrite, chromite, magnetite, ilmenite, and chalcopyrite have also been recorded as inclusions or associated minerals. Fluid inclusions occur but are generally less visually dominant than the solid mineral inclusions. This inclusion suite is one reason Habachtal emerald can often be separated from Egyptian emerald despite broad similarities in age-related historical discussions and some spectroscopic features.
The host-rock assemblage includes beryl, talc, actinolite, biotite, chlorite, and phengite, with gray to blue beryl, rare phenakite, and rare chrysoberyl recorded from the deposit. The broader Habachtal mineral district is also famous for pyrite, actinolite, magnetite octahedra, aquamarine, tourmaline, smoky quartz, rock crystal, and prehnite from nearby Alpine fissure occurrences, but emerald specimens specifically from the Leckbachrinne are prized for the emerald-in-schist association.
Quality in Habachtal material is judged differently for mineral specimens and gems. For specimens, the decisive factors are matrix aesthetics, crystal placement, recognizable hexagonal form, green color, and lack of disruptive damage. A crystal does not need to be facetable to be excellent if it is sharp and well displayed. For gems, the standards are more severe: the material must overcome the locality’s usual inclusions, fractures, small size, and color zoning. This is why fine faceted Habachtal emeralds are scarce and why the locality’s reputation among collectors rests so heavily on matrix pieces.
Habachtal emerald is not generally common on the international specimen market, but it is not unknown. Small crystals, fragments, and modest matrix pieces appear periodically, especially in Austrian and German-speaking mineral channels. Strong matrix pieces with sharp crystals, old provenance, or a documented find period sell much more readily. The finest examples tend to remain in European private collections, regional museums, and long-held Alpine collections.
The most important authenticity issue is locality attribution. A dark schist matrix with a green beryl crystal is suggestive but not proof. Habachtal pieces should ideally have old labels, dealer provenance, or a credible chain back to Austrian sources. Matrix, habit, and inclusions should make sense together: the classic look is emerald or green beryl on biotite-rich schist, with the crystal conforming naturally to the matrix rather than appearing planted.
For loose stones and faceted emeralds, the usual emerald cautions apply. Oiling or resin filling is common in the emerald trade generally and should always be disclosed; Habachtal emeralds, because they are often fractured and included, can be visually affected by clarity enhancement if cut for jewelry. Synthetic emerald, glass, and assembled stones are general-market concerns, not a uniquely Habachtal problem, but any claimed Habachtal cut stone of unusually large size, high clarity, and low price deserves skepticism.
For matrix specimens, watch for three practical problems: contact damage where the crystal meets the schist, bruised or chipped terminations, and over-cleaning. The host schist can be friable and micaceous, and crystals are commonly partly embedded, contacted, or fractured. Many honest specimens show natural contacts into the matrix. A pristine, free-standing Habachtal crystal is much rarer than a partly embedded prism.
Collectors should also be careful with labels that use “Habachtal” broadly. The valley is mineral-rich, and many minerals occur in nearby gullies and Alpine fissures. Emerald locality labels should be as specific as possible: Leckbachgraben, Leckbachrinne, Nasenkopf, Habachtal, Bramberg am Wildkogel, Zell am See District, Salzburg, Austria. The best labels preserve both the valley name and the deposit name.
The first reliable printed description is almost disarmingly modest: in 1797, Schroll reported a prismatic emerald crystal found in a piece of mica schist from the Salzburg locality. That single observation was enough to cause excitement. At that time, Colombia was the dominant known emerald source in European gem knowledge, the Ural emerald deposits had not yet been discovered, and the ancient Egyptian emerald mines had been lost for centuries. A green beryl crystal in Alpine schist was not merely a curiosity; it was a European emerald occurrence in a period when such a thing seemed extraordinary.
Early collecting at the primary source had the drama of Alpine mineral hunting at its most dangerous. Later accounts describe crystals being broken from the Smaragdpalfen, the emerald-bearing cliff, at “mortal danger.” Collectors worked the steep rock with ropes, trying to pry crystals from biotite schist where the mountain itself allowed only a few pieces at a time. The image is worth keeping in mind when looking at old matrix specimens: the crystal may be small, but the setting that produced and exposed it was not gentle.
Samuel Goldschmidt’s entry into the valley gives Habachtal its first fully industrial chapter. Goldschmidt was a Viennese jeweler from a family already active in the gem trade. In 1861 he explored the deposit with geological guidance, and in February 1862 he purchased a parcel of about one square kilometer from the Austrian government for 1,000 Gulden. The old map of the property even marks the stone residence built for miners—the Smaragdhaus, still remembered as the Goldschmidthütte. In the spring of 1862, Goldschmidt’s firm presented emerald crystals in host rock at the Agricultural, Industrial and Art Exhibition in London. By 1864, his Vienna business was advertising rough emeralds in matrix from its proprietary Salzburg mine to mineral collectors. That detail says much about the deposit: even in its first systematic working, Habachtal was already a specimen locality as much as a gemstone mine.
The English period brought bigger expectations and deeper disappointment. Emerald Mines Limited worked the deposit from the late 1890s into the early twentieth century, with underground galleries in the Leckbachgraben and seasonal crews. Optimistic reports circulated, but the rock did not obey the prospectus. Later analysis of the historical record makes the problem brutally simple: most emerald was not cutting quality. A 1929 report identified that only about 2% of recovered emeralds were facet grade. That statistic explains much of Habachtal’s stop-and-start mining history: emerald was present, the locality was famous, but commercial gem yield remained stubbornly small.
Some finds became legends. One older local chronicle tells of a large fine stone found during the English era that triggered a three-day celebration among the workers. Another story names an engineer, Fothringham, who found a pure emerald in the Sedl below the adit, described as about pencil-thick. The same account tells of Balthasar Schweinberger, a weaver from Neukirchen, washing out a large, pure, dark green emerald and showing it to an engineer, who cried, “Bravo, Hauser! Der Stein zahlt die Arbeit des ganzen Sommers!”—the stone pays for the whole summer’s work. A miner named Martin Stanggaßner is said to have found a 3 cm, finger-thick, very pure emerald, sold it for 1,400 Gulden, and heard that once cut it might have been worth vastly more. Such stories are local-memory material rather than laboratory evidence, but they capture the emotional economics of Habachtal: weeks of schist, mud, and disappointment could be overturned by one green crystal in a sieve.
Modern visitors know a gentler version of the same suspense below the Leckbachrinne. The upper mine is private and hazardous, but the lower debris and stream gravels still draw families, collectors, and hopeful first-timers. The method is simple: shovel gravel, wash it through a sieve, and learn to distinguish true emerald green from every other Alpine sparkle. The 2002 debris flow gave the lower search area renewed importance by moving emerald-bearing material down from the gully. The best finds are still rare, but the psychological hook is powerful: a single small green prism on the mesh can make the whole walk into the valley feel justified.
Karl Schmetzer, “History of Emerald Mining in the Habachtal Deposit of Austria, Part I,” Gems & Gemology, Winter 2021, Vol. 57, No. 4, pp. 338–371. The essential archival treatment of early references, Goldschmidt’s purchase, and mining history through 1914. Read at GIA
Karl Schmetzer, “History of Emerald Mining in the Habachtal Deposit of Austria, Part II,” Gems & Gemology, Spring 2022. Continues the mining history from 1916 through the modern Steiner-family era and discusses the economic realities of the deposit. Read at GIA
Maria Nikopoulou, Stavros Karampelas, Uwe Henn, Panagiotis Gamaletsos, Emmanuel Fritsch, et al., “Microscopic, Spectroscopic and Chemical Analysis of Emeralds from Habachtal, Austria,” Minerals, 2025, 15, 22. A modern analytical study of inclusions, spectroscopy, and trace-element features of Habachtal emeralds compared with Egyptian emeralds. Read at MDPI
G. Grundmann and G. Morteani, “Emerald mineralization during regional metamorphism: the Habachtal (Austria) and Leydsdorp (Transvaal, South Africa) deposits,” Economic Geology, 1989, Vol. 84, No. 7, pp. 1835–1849. A key paper arguing for emerald formation in metasomatic blackwall zones associated with ultramafic bodies during regional metamorphism. Publication record at TUM
Günter Grundmann and Giulio Morteani, “Die Geologie des Smaragdvorkommens im Habachtal (Land Salzburg, Österreich),” early 1980s work cited repeatedly in later Habachtal studies. Important for the mapped geology of the Leckbachrinne deposit. ResearchGate record
Günter Grundmann and Giulio Morteani, “Die Mineralien des Smaragdvorkommens im Habachtal,” early 1980s work on the deposit’s mineralogy. Useful for associated minerals and paragenesis. ResearchGate record
The “Madonna emerald,” found in 1970 and approximately 30 cm tall, is on permanent display at the Bramberg Museum and is one of the iconic Habachtal specimens documented in Schmetzer’s Gems & Gemology Part II article.
An 82 ct Habachtal emerald crystal, 3.3 cm long, was sold by the Bergmann company to the British Museum in 1883 and is documented in Schmetzer’s Gems & Gemology Part I article.
A 12 mm, 15 ct Habachtal emerald found in 1972 and a 4.5 cm, 128 ct gem-quality crystal found in the mid-1970s are documented in Schmetzer’s Gems & Gemology Part I article as exceptional twentieth-century examples.
“Smaragdweg im Habachtal,” Heimatlexikon – Unser Österreich, ServusTV / Austria-Forum. A short video feature on the Habachtal Emerald Trail and the cultural setting of emerald searching in the valley. Watch / download at Austria-Forum
“DVD: Sternstunden der Mineraliensuche,” Familie Steiner / Mineralien Steiner. Includes a 10:09 segment titled “Smaragdbergwerk” with footage from work in the Habachtal emerald mine. DVD page at Mineralien Steiner
“Wo kann man Smaragde finden? Smaragdsuche im Habachtal mit Anleitung und großen Funden,” Thomas Kargl. A lighthearted YouTube video linked from Kargl’s Habachtal emerald-searching guide. Watch on YouTube
Mindat: Leckbachgraben, Nasenkopf mountain, Bramberg am Wildkogel, Salzburg, Austria — The principal locality database page for the Habachtal emerald deposit, with coordinates, mineral list, photos, and locality hierarchy.
Nationalpark Hohe Tauern: Habachtal — Official visitor information on the “Valley of Emeralds,” the Emerald Trail, public searching below the Leckbachrinne, and safety warnings for the upper gully.
Wildkogel-Arena: Hiking in the Habach Valley — Local tourism overview with historical notes on Frischholz, Mielichhofer, Zepharovich, and the emerald-searching area.
Wikimedia Commons: Emerald Deposit — Freely licensed photos of Habachtal emerald specimens, mostly from the Rob Lavinsky / iRocks archive.
Wikimedia Commons: Smaragdbergwerk Habachtal — Images related to the Habachtal emerald mine, including public display-board photos and emerald-searching material.
Mineralien Steiner: Smaragdbergwerk im Habachtal — The Steiner family’s page on the modern mine, with notes on ongoing small-scale recovery and specimen or jewelry use.
SalzburgerLand Magazin: Smaragdsuche im Habachtal — Accessible field-travel piece on searching below the gully, tool rental, and the visitor experience around Gasthof Alpenrose.
SAGEN.at: Smaragd-Bergbau im Habachtal, Salzburg — Digitized local historical account preserving older stories, names, and mining lore from Josef Lahnsteiner’s 1965 regional work.
Thomas Kargl: Smaragd Suche im Habachtal — Practical, first-person German-language guide to searching the lower gravels, including seasonal advice and simple field method.