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marylin monroe
Showing posts with label diamonds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diamonds. Show all posts

How to Identify Diamonds in Nature

14.2 carat octahedral diamond from
Kelsey Lake, Colorado (photo
courtesy of Howard Coopersmith).
In addition to the type of diamond we see at weddings, other varieties of extremely hard natural carbon are known including carbonado (polycrystalline) and lonsdaleite (hexagonal). These are all forms of carbon, as is graphite. But carbonado and lonsdaleite are very rare compared to natural diamond (which in itself is very rare). For information on lonsdaleite and other natural forms of hard carbon, refer to Erlich and Hausel (2002). Only crystalline, isometric diamond (the kind of diamonds we buy from jewelry stores) will be considered.

In its simplest form, isometric diamond is an equal-dimensional mineral that may form six-sided crystals known to mineralogists as hexahedrons; but to prospectors, these are simply cubes. A more common habit (form) of diamond is the octahedron. To imagine what an octahedron looks like, try to visualize an Egyptian pyramid. Now imagine that pyramid surrounded by a crystal clear lake with its refection in the water. It would appear as if two pyramids were attached at the base: this would be an eight-sided octahedron.

Modified octahedron with many more faces.
Many octahedral crystals develop ridges on the octahedral faces resulting in crystals of trisoctahedral or hexoctahedral habit. Partial resorption of octahedral diamonds produce rounded dodecahedrons (12-sided crystals) with rhombic faces. Many dodecahedrons have ridges on the rhombic faces resulting in a 24-sided crystal known as a trishexahedron. Four-sided tetrahedral diamonds are sometimes encountered that are thought to be distorted octahedrons. Another relatively common form of diamond is a macle, or twinned diamond. Diamond macles appear as flattened triangular crystals. It should be obvious that diamonds have many crystal habits, so if you would like to know more about these, it is recommended to read Bauer (1968a) and Bruton (1978).

Most diamond surfaces will have growth trigons (equilateral triangles) and less commonly trigonal pits. And some will have hexagons (6-sided pits or raised areas. You are likely getting the idea that there are many complexities to understanding diamond crystal habits or shapes. But don’t despair. If the above information snowed you, just remember there is a simple instrument known as a diamond detector sometimes called a diamond detective that you can purchase on-line for a minimal price. It will tell you if you have a diamond or not by simply touching the crystal and pressing a button. Nothing could be simpler for a prospector, rock hound and even geologist and gemologist.
Magnified diamond surface showing several trigons.
Diamonds have distinct, brilliant, greasy luster that is likened to oiled glass. Often quartz is mistaken for diamond, but the dull luster of quartz is no match for the brilliant adamantine luster of diamond. Gem-quality diamonds can be translucent to transparent, colorless, green, yellow, brown, black and rarely blue or pink. Opaque and heavily included diamonds (bort) are used for industrial purposes and have little value.

Diamond is brittle, extremely hard (H=10 on the Moh’s scale), with a specific gravity of 3.5, and has perfect octahedral cleavage. Even though diamond is heavier than water, it is non-wettable (hydrophobic) and will float on water given the right circumstances. Some flotation devises have been designed to extract diamond using water’s surface tension. Being hydrophobic, diamonds are also grease attractive. This property is used to recover diamonds in many places around the world, where shaking tables are coated with grease to extract diamonds from concentrates run over grease tables with water. The grease, usually a mixture of Vaseline and paraffin in a 10:1 ratio, is coated on the shaking table surface.
Under ultraviolet light, many diamonds fluoresce pale blue, green yellow, and rarely red. This characteristic of diamond is used in many diamond mills, such as Sortex, which detects fluorescence from diamonds when they are x-rayed.

Since diamonds are extremely rare, it takes considerable effort and patience to find the gemstone. It has been estimated diamond occurs in concentrations of less than 1 part per million in commercial diamondiferous kimberlites. This means you have 999,999 parts of waste rock to run through to find that 1 part per million diamond only after you have searched and searched for the primary host rock. And not all kimberlites, lamproites and lamprophyres have diamond.

Sloan kimberlite, Colorado. This kimberlite contains diamonds as well as
other gemstones including Cape Ruby (pyrope garnet) and chromian diopside.
Years ago, it was common knowledge in the mining industry that only about 10% of kimberlites contained diamond (Lampietti and Sutherland, 1978; Hausel, 1998). This estimate was not quite correct as many other rocks at the time had been erroneously classified as kimberlite – and over the years, there has been a lot more kimberlites found (Hausel, 2008a). So the percentage of diamondiferous verses barren kimberlites is much higher than originally thought. But at the same time, the percentage of diamondiferous verses barren lamproites and lamprophyres is very low.

Iron Mountain kimberlite, Wyoming
The primary rocks that diamond is found in are known as peridotite and eclogite. These are rare mantle-derived rocks (nodules) that are actually sampled, or picked up by rare volcanic eruptions (i.e., kimberlite, lamproite and some lamprophyre). Thus the kimberlite, lamproite and lamprophyre magmas accidentally pick up these rare diamond-rich rocks at great depth and bring them to the earth’s surface in rare old volcanoes. Many of the diamond-rich nodules survive intact after being shot out of the earth’s mantle from depths of 90 to 120 miles, while others break up with their diamonds being diluted in the magma. As an example of how rich some primary host rocks are, one sample of eclogite from the Sloan kimberlite in Colorado contained an estimated 20% diamond! But kimberlite magma itself, was many times poorer in diamond than this eclogite.

No other mineral (other than gold) seems to elude correct identification by prospectors and rock hounds. This is because of a poor understanding of mineralogy and because most people tend to see things that don’t exist and let their imaginations run wild. After 30 years of working with the public and identifying samples for people almost on a daily basis, I only had two people who correctly identified diamond. Many hundreds thought they had diamond, but were seeing things that were just not there.

Iron Mountain vesicular? kimberlite, Wyoming. All of the
pores in this kimberlite may have been the result of either
abundant gas bubbles or alternatively, they could be the
impressions of minerals eroded out of the kimberlite, i.e.,
boxworks.
I have many stories about these prospectors and rock hounds that are both educational and interesting. One prospector called me from his truck at Jeffrey City and wanted to know what to do with all of the diamonds he had found. I was impressed: "How many did you find?" I asked.

"There are thousands all over the hill side!" He responded.

Being curious, I asked him, “How are you verifying these diamonds?"

"I just scratch the windshield on my truck, and they leave a nice scratch", he responded.

Being a wise ass, I asked, "Are you going to be able to see out your window well enough to drive home?"

Victor kimberlite, Canada.
He was right, diamonds will scratch windshields! Windshields are made of glass with a hardness of only 5.5 to 6 on the Moh's scale. This means many minerals will scratch windshields including pyrite, feldspar, corundum and of course quartz. One way windshield’s become pitted (scratched) during dust storms is due to all of the fine sand that is blown into the windshield.

Another prospector called and said he had been diamond hunting for years and never found any. After talking awhile he mentioned his method for diamond testing: "I simply put them on an anvil and hit them with a hammer!" He talked about all of the octahedral crystals he had picked up from streams and kimberlites in the Colorado-Wyoming State Line district (where several known diamond deposits occurred) but none were diamonds because they all failed his test!



A fairly inexpensive design for a grease table constructed by Jay Roberts at
the Wyoming Geological Survey. The light-bluish white coating is the grease
mixture. The problem with this material (particularly on a university campus)
was that we had to buy Vaseline by the case. We often received accusing
expressions from drug store employees assuming we were with a fraternity
planning for some weekend orgy.


A giant diamond from Africa - 620 carats in weight. This diamond was actually on display for a short time at Wiseman's
Jewelry in Laramie, where I was able to photograph the extraordinary stone.

I then explained to him about the difference between hardness and mechanical brittleness and that all diamonds will break when struck by a hammer. You could hear that sound of ... well, it sounded like muffled swearing in the background as he hung up.

In another case, I received a phone call from an individual who claimed to have found the largest diamond in the world just west of Cheyenne. According to an unnamed gemologist from Cheyenne, this crystal was pronounced to be diamond. But the gemologist suggested that before the prospector put it on and purchased a large mansion on the French Riviera, he should visit my office in Laramie for a second opinion.

I gave him directions to my office. It’s about an hour’s drive from Cheyenne, so I was surprised when he and his three family members were knocking on my office door about 30 minutes later. They were apparently anxious to cash in their millions.

The diamond discoverer introduced himself as ‘Jack’ and did not give a last name, and without further hesitation, opened a locked brief case chained to his wrist and showed me the ‘Star of Cheyenne’. It was fist size - about the same size as the famous Cullinan diamond. The Cullinan was by far the largest diamond ever found and weighed a whopping 3,006 carats and was recovered at the Premier Mine in South Africa. It was priceless and ended up in the Crown Jewels of England.

Kimberlite? Nope, some prospectors would call this kimberlite, but it is
actually a lamproite.
In the late 1970s, I had met Dr. Arnold Waters. Dr. Waters was at the time, the former Chief Geologist for DeBeers in South Africa and he told me that when the Cullinan was found, it had a distinct cleaved surface where part of the diamond had been broken in two during assent to the earth's surface in a kimberlite magma (volcano). He indicated the other half of the diamond could have been as large or larger, but was never found! Did it break off somewhere at great depth and still many miles deep in the earth? Did it make it to the surface and was missed by the sorters and ended up in the crusher where it made many little diamonds? It’s something to wonder about.
The ‘Star of Cheyenne’ was reluctantly handed to me. As soon as I saw it, I knew what it was, but decided to have a little fun. First I showed them how to test a mineral’s specific gravity by weighing the gem in water and then in air. I determined the crystal to have a specific gravity about 2.7 - too light for diamond (diamond's specific gravity at 3.5 is heavy enough it would show up with garnets and black sands in a gold pan). I also tested the hardness by taking a diamond chip and easily scratching a deep notch in the crystal. This resulted in an immediate protest by the family as they thought I was scratching their priceless diamond.

“Hold on!,” I exclaimed. “If this were a diamond, I wouldn’t be able to scratch it with a diamond chip, diamond has a Moh’s hardness of 10 and is the hardest known natural mineral, and it is very, very difficult to scratch a diamond with another diamond”. After I calmed them down and convinced them that they had an ordinary piece of rock crystal (transparent massive quartz), they left the office dejected and drove back to Cheyenne with visions of mansions and Porches fading. And I thought this was over.

The next day, I was contacted by one of our other geologists - Ray Harris (RIP) - who stopped in my office to tell me he had just received a call from a person in Cheyenne who had a probable diamond that he wanted to have verified. The person on the phone explained to him that they had already talked to me, but he and his gemologist decided that another opinion was necessary.

The diamond detective - yep, that's me when I was VP of US Exploration for DiamonEx Ltd, Australia. During exploration in Colorado, Montana, Kansas and Wyoming, we identified hundreds of cryptovolcanic structures that look almost like impact craters with the exception that these are structurally controlled - located on a fault or similar feature. Would you like more information from the Gem Hunter? Follow me on Facebook and link to my GemHunter website.
Ray went back to his office to await the family. I laughed to myself. Ray was a very good geologist, but he had a reputation as a klutz. He was famous for running into things, breaking things, and if anything could go wrong – leave it to Ray. One of my favorite stories about Ray took place at a staff meeting. Ray was holding a cup of coffee in his left hand. I notice this and decided to catch him off guard. So I quickly asked him for the time of day. Without hesitation, Ray rotated his wrist to look at his watch pouring his coffee into his lap. We all had a great time with Ray, but during his last year, he was bullied by his supervisor until he died. I will always miss Ray – he was a good friend.


Anyway, the Cheyenne family arrived with their gem. They talked about the gemologist’s opinions and their concern about my scratching the diamond. I don't know if Ray had ever seen a diamond in the rough before (few geologists had) and after examining the fist-size specimen with his hand lens, he decided to get a better look at the gemstone and carried it to his microscope in his adjacent lab with the family following him. Then it happened! He lost control of the sample and it crashed onto the floor shattering into dozens of pieces.

Ray told me the family turned white as ghosts. But Ray consoled them looking down at all of the pieces. “Well, guess it wasn’t diamond – it has conchoidal fracture”. The family scooped up the fragments of their precious quartz and went home, never to be seen again. When Ray told me about his event – I laughed, and pointed out to him that diamond (as well as quartz) has conchoidal fracture. Ray turned white. But don't worry - it was just a piece of quartz.
Prismatic quartz crystal from
Hot Springs Arkansas

Blue quartz from Montana

Sweetwater agates (quartz) from the Granite Mountains, Wyoming

Kimberlite and Lamproite - Host Rocks for Diamond

Chuck Norris's cousin, Vic, digs for hidden kimberlite under grassy vegetation
anomaly discovered by the Gem Hunter in the Iron Mountain kimberlite
district in Wyoming.
Kimberlite is very difficult to recognize. It is basically a potassic peridotite and comes in a variety of colors and textures. Most notable is green kimberlite due to abundant serpentinized olivine.

It typically erupts from a feeder dike complex at depth and rises to a pipe-like structure known as a diatreme and blows out at the surface like a canon under great pressure.


Hypabyssal facies kimberlites samples fro the Iron Mountain district, Wyoming. Note the large, rounded mineral grains - these are hematite -serpentine pseudomorphs after olivine. This type of kimberlite forms in dikes and at the 'blow' of the the kimberlite pipe.

Hypabyssal facies kimberlite, Masontown, Pennsylvania. This kimberlite dike is enclosed by black shale.
Almost looks like a basalt, but instead, this is a sample of Ison Creek kimberlite I collected in Kentucky. This is known as basaltic kimberlite.

Snap Lake hypabyssal facies kimberlite, Fort Smith, Canada.


Diamond-bearing diatreme facies kimberlite breccia from Lake Ellen, UP, Michigan.


You probably would never have guessed this to be kimberlite. This bleached, tuffaceous, crater facies kimberlite from the Iron Mountain district, Wyoming has some pyrope garnet and picroilmenite and looks more like scoria than kimberlite


IG3 Kimberlite from Iron Mountain. Another tuffaceous kimberlite.

The Ferris 2 kimberlite from Wyoming.


Large fractured chromian diopside (chrome diopside gemstone) megacryst in Sloan 2 kimberlite from Colorado. Gemstones like this are typically not recovered from diamond mines even though they are as beautiful as any emerald.


Kimberlite from the Victor pipe in Canada.

Major Diamond and Colored Gemstone Deposits Found in US

MAJOR DIAMOND PROVINCE DISCOVERED
see GEMHUNTER

See also http://DiamondProspector.webs.com
State Line Kimberlite Province showing locations of (1) Radichal kimberlite &
Mineral Indicator Anomalies, (2) the Iron Mountain kimberlite district, (3) Schaffer,
Aultman, Ferris kimberlites, (4) Keslsey Lake Kimberlites (5) Nix kimberlites, (6)
Sloan kimberlites, (7) Estes park kimberlites, (8) Boulder Kimberlite, (9) Boden
diamond placer. In between these are several hundred cryptovolcanic structures
with similarities to kimberlite pipes as well as more than 300 kimberlitic mineral
anomalies.



False-color aerial photo shows a few of the several hundred
cryptovolcanic structures that have been found in Colorado
and Wyoming. These structures are lake filled, structurally
controlled depressions with carbonate-rich soils
on shore lines. Are these just lakes? Or
are they diamondiferous kimberlites? Note the roads near
these structures to get an idea of scale.

Research suggests that the Wyoming Craton encloses a world-class diamond province as well as major deposits of colored gemstones. The Wyoming Craton includes portions of Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Montana , Wyoming, Alberta & Saskatchewan, & encloses the two largest known kimberlite districts in the US & the largest lamproite & lamprophyre fields in North America. Diamonds have been reported in kimberlites and lamprophyres in this craton in Canada, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and Kansas.

Winkler Crater in Kansas with two trenches dug to sample the material.
Originally classified as an impact crater until it was verified by Doug
Brookins to be kimberlite. Tested by Cominco American in the 1980s
the pipe may have yielded one microdiamond, but there is concern that
the diamond may have been contaminate from the State Line district.
Hundreds of kimberlites, lamproites and lamprophyres were identified over the past few decades. In addition the many known diamondiferous kimberlites & lamprophyres, in recent years, four significant iolite (water sapphire) deposits were found as well as deposits of ruby, sapphire, opal, kyanite gems, jade, chromian diopside (Cape Emerald), pyrope garnet (Cape Ruby), almandine garnet, spessartine garnet, peridot, gem-quality apatite, jasper, agate, onyx and other gems - all found since about 1975. Two of the iolite deposits are world class. This region has turned into an exploration geologists' and rockhounds' paradise.

Consulting geologist W. Dan Hausel identified hundreds of cryptovolcanic structures within this province over the past several years. Many are quite large and some are situated within known diamond districts and in large areas that remain unexplored. In addition to the the known kimberlite, lamproite and lamprophyre districts, more than a dozen new districts containing many cryptovolcanic structures were discovered. As incredible as it seems, a few lie adjacent to interstates and highways and have been missed by millions of travelers every year.

Cryptovolcanic structure (kimberlite) in Colorado showing open park associated with depression.
During the past 30 years, the two largest diamondiferous kimberlite districts in the US and the largest field of lamproites in North America were mapped in the Colorado-Wyoming region. Several hundred kimberlitic indicator mineral anomalies were also scattered all over Wyoming, parts of Colorado, Utah, Montana, Kansas and Alberta. Other researchers found similar anomalies.

The several hundred cryptovolcanic structures have characteristics that suggest most are kimberlite pipes. They are circular to elliptical in shape, structurally controlled, many are distinct depressions with distinct vegetation anomalies similar to kimberlites mapped in the past. Some of the depressions are so distinct that they have actually been mistaken as impact sites, such as the Winkler crater in Kansas, that was originally thought to be an impact site, and later discovered to be kimberlite, and a few depressions that were identified in the central Laramie Range and Medicine Bow Mountains. Field examination of many depressions show visible blue ground and carbonate-rich soil, with rounded boulders and cobbles –characteristics that are generally associated with kimberlite. In addition, samples from some sites yield the traditional kimberlitic indicator minerals.

Historically kimberlite pipes were described in 19th century South Africa as having ‘blue ground’, considerable calcium carbonate, and were thought to be old dry stream placers because they contained rounded cobbles and boulders (similar to the cryptovolcanic structures found in the Wyoming craton). The rounded boulders were instead due to country rock fragments that had been rounded and polished in the kimberlite magma as it erupted a few hundred million years ago.

Diamonds from Arkansas - photo
from Glenn Worthington
A few of these structures may represent some of the larger pipes in the world. The best explanation for most of these depressions is that they represent soft, circular deposits of rock that is dramatically different from the more resistant and harder basement granite and gneiss country rock they intrude. Kimberlite typically erupts in circular maar-like volcanoes and is a relatively soft rock. This is why so many kimberlites discovered in Canada as well as in the Wyoming craton form distinct open, treeless parks, with several being submerged under shallow ponds and lakes.

Such structures have been found in the Laramie, Medicine Bow, Front and Seminoe Mountains, the Green River Basin, Bighorn Basin, eastern Kansas, and Alberta. Several hundred were found as far south as Denver Colorado, to as far north as central Alberta, and as far west as Little America to as far east as eastern Kansas. In the vicinity of the Colorado-Wyoming border, Hausel mapped the State Line district with more than 40 diamondiferous kimberlites. Some of these form distinct circular depressions and have already be verified as diamond pipes.


Rough diamond with trigons
Unfortunately, only a few of the anomalies and the known kimberlites, lamproites and lamprophyres have been tested for diamond. But nearly all that have been tested yielded some diamonds. The State Line district alone produced more than 130,000 diamonds during testing in past years. No one really knows what awaits discovery here as past diamond testing was inefficient.

For example, the four diamond mills constructed to test various diamond deposits in the State Line district had many significant flaws & evidence supports that they only recovered a small portion of the diamonds. Even so, gem diamonds >28 carats were recovered along with a octahedral diamond fragment from a larger diamond estimated at 80 to 90 carats. But much larger diamonds were very likely missed by the mills, and these deposits likely contain hundreds of thousands of carats! In Wyoming, kimberlites yielded 50% high-quality gem diamonds. In Colorado, about 30% with gem-quality.

Little effort to outline this resource has been done by the respective state geological surveys in recent years. Research expenditures on diamonds in Wyoming, Colorado, Montana & Kansas has been nearly non-existent compared to the tens of millions of dollars spent for Canadian research along with the hundreds of millions in exploration by companies. Canada now has some commercial diamond mines developed since 1998 an others in the planning stages. In fact, state and federal agencies in the US, which should be conducting research, have only hindered research.

Past work has shown that nearly 50% of the diamonds in this craton have been very high quality gemstones. But at the pace that various government agencies are investing to outline this resource (currently non-existent) is shameful and little will happen until a major diamond is accidentally found by a prospector or rock hound.





Diamonds from the State Line of Colorado & Wyoming



In Canada, it typically takes $1.5 million per discovery (whether diamondiferous or barren). The Wyoming Geological Survey invested about $20K in research over the past 30 years! - "It is no wonder why nothing is happening, yet a new multi-$billion dollar industry potentially awaits discovery".

And the author believes he has found enough kimberlites, anomalies and colored gemstone deposits in this region that could have enough value to pay for a significant portion of the national debt (prior to Obama). In addition to significant diamond resources, two world-class colored gemstone deposits were discovered along with other major and significant gem deposits. The area not only provides some of the better samples of kimberlite, but has also been the most productive in the US as far as the number of diamonds recovered.

KIMBERLITE PIPES
Hundreds of kimberlite pipes occur in a large group of 12 districts within a major diamond province in Colorado and Wyoming. Some of the recently discovered districts enclosed as many as 50 known cryptovolcanic structures (along with potentially dozens of hidden kimberlites).

Aerial photos showing (left) - one of more than a dozen distinct cryptovolcanic structures (depression filled with rounded boulders & cobbles containing calcium-carbonate-rich soils within a granitic terrain) in the Happy Jack area west of Cheyenne.

And (right) aerial photo of one of the largest cryptovolcanic structures in North America at the Twin Lakes field south of Interstate 80 west of Cheyenne. This field of >50 such structures (kimberlites?) are outline by distinct vegetation anomalies, depressions in silicate-rich Proterozoic age granites & gneisses in cratonized belts, have considerable calcium-carbonate salts (white bull's eyes), rounded boulders, are structurally controlled and located between the State Line and Iron Mountain diamondiferous kimberlite districts.

The author discovered these in the State Line district, the Red Feather Lakes district, the Boulder district, the Happy Jack district, Horse Creek district, Iron Mountain district, Middle Sybille Creek district, Indian Guide district, Harrison district, Twin Mountain district, Eagle Rock district, King Rock district, Strong Creek district, Grant Creek anomaly, Lone Pine field, Lost Lake field, Creedmore Lake field, Chicken Park field, BG field, Lake Owen district, and the Douglas Creek district. Very few of these are tested but provide evidence for one of the largest kimberlite provinces in the world. IN the past, the author mapped the two largest diamondiferous kimberlite districts in the US (Iron Mountain and State Line) in this region.

LAMPROITE AND LAMPROPHYRE
One of the largest lamproite fields in the world (Leucite Hills) and one of the largest lamprophyre fields in North America (Missouri Breaks) occurs in this region, and few of these have been tested even though a group of lamprophyres near Cedar Mountain Wyoming contain diamonds and several lamprophyres have produced diamond-stability minerals, and evidence suggests that one of the largest lamprophyre fields in the world is located in southwestern Wyoming near the Leucite Hills lamproite field.

PLACER DIAMONDS
Placer diamonds are likely to be found all over the region, but little exploration has occurred. In the state line district, the kimberlites are deeply eroded providing geological evidence for a very large placer diamond population to occur in the adjacent draininges. To date, only a few samples have been taken in these drainages, yet placer diamonds as large as 6.2 carats were recovered in the past.


IOLITE
One deposit discovered more than 10 years ago yielded the largest iolite gemstone in the world at the time of the discovery - a >1700 carat iolite. Recently, a world-class iolite deposit was discovered where a >24,000 carat iolite gemstone was collected, but masses of gem were identified in outcrop that are estimated to weigh >a million carats. At another deposit, high-quality iolites were verified, where past exploration accidentally identified a deposit that could be the largest ever found - it is suggested that this latter deposit could host more than a trillion carats of iolite (iolite sells for $15 to $150/carat).

Many other gemstone deposits are suspected in this region. For example, nearly a dozen ruby deposits were found by searching favorable geological regions and recovering rubies in stream sediment samples while searching for diamond deposits. Need more information on diamonds, other gemstones and how to find them? We are putting together a newsletter to send out to interested prospectors and geologists - write to us at: diamondprospector@live.com.


Photo of outcrop of iolite in central Laramie Mountains.

And, I've always wanted to see if I could cleave a large diamond with my hand. So, do you have a giant diamond you would like to donate to this research project? Diamond verses Karate.






Diamond Books by the author

Exploration, Mining, Milling, Gemology & Uses of Diamond


Raw diamonds from Arkansas (photo from Glenn Worthington). If you
are interested in digging for diamonds, get a copy of Glenn's book and
video.
Kimberlite pipes erupt as violent volcanoes - the magma, as it weathers, releases diamonds and tracer minerals such as chromian diopside, pyrope garnet, picroilmenite, chromite, etc. into streams where they can be panned and traced back to the source rock. While panning for these indicator minerals, sometimes other valuable minerals are found including diamond, gold, ruby, sapphire.

EXPLORATION
Cost figures for annual diamond exploration amounts to tens of millions of dollars. Capitalization costs for the development of the Ekati diamond mine in the Northwest Territories were more than $800 million. When an exploration program is initiated, priority is given to areas of highest favorability and best access for finding ‘traditional’ diamondiferous host rocks. For example, commercial diamondiferous kimberlites are considered to be restricted to cratonic regions that have been relatively stable for 1.5 Ga (billion years). Janse (1984, 1994) suggested that cratons be separated into areas of favorability. He suggested separating these regions into Archons,Pprotons and Tectons. This method for outlining regions of favorability provides an excellent first option priority list that has withstood through time.

Archons (Archean basement stabilized >2.5 Ga ago) are considered to have high potential for discovery of commercial diamond deposits hosted by kimberlite and possibly by lamproite and lamprophyre.  Protons (Early to Middle Proterozoic [2.5–1.6 Ga] basement terrains) have moderate potential for commercial diamond deposits in kimberlite and high potential for commercial diamond deposits in lamproite and possibly lamprophyre. Tectons (Late Proterozoic [1.6 Ga–600 Ma] basement terrains) are considered to have low potential for commercial diamondiferous host rock. Unconventional diamond deposits (such as high-pressure metamorphic complexes, astroblemes, subduction-related complexes and volcaniclastics) may occur in tectonically active terrains, but the methods for exploration for these are not well defined, nor are the parameters that identify high from low priority established.

Following selection of a favorable terrain, topographic and geological maps, aerial and satellite imagery, and aerial geophysical data are examined. Unusual circular depressions, circular drainage patterns, noteworthy structural trends and vegetation anomalies are noted. For example, Hausel (2009a,b) identified several targets using available software on the Internet including Google Earth, Virtual Earth and others. Geophysics is used to search for distinct (“bull’s eye”) conductors and magnetic anomalies. Geochemical data are examined for Cr, Ni, Mg, and Nb anomalies.

Stream sediment sampling. One of the primary methods used in diamond exploration is stream sediment sampling programs designed to search for ‘kimberlitic indicator minerals’ (pyrope garnet, chromian diopside, chromian enstatite, picroilmenite, chromian spinel, and of course diamond).  Diamond targets are small and may range from diatremes of several acres to narrow dikes and sills.  Diamond-bearing kimberlites and lamproites typically contain abundant soft serpentine with resistant mantle-derived xenocrysts and xenoliths.  The serpentine matrix tends to decompose releasing distinct mantle-derived ‘kimberlitic indicator minerals’ into the surrounding environment.  The indicator minerals may be carried downstream for hundreds of yards, or a few or many miles depending on the climatic and geomorphic history of the region.  Diamonds however, are thought to be carried considerable distances – in some cases, hundreds of miles.  The indicator minerals may provide a trail leading back to the source.

Panning for diamonds at undisclosed location in Wyoming
In the planning stages of stream-sediment sampling, proposed sample sites are initially marked in prominent drainages on a topographic map using a sample spacing designed to take advantage of the region.  In arid regions, sample spacing should take advantage of relatively short transport distances of the indicator minerals.  In subarctic to arctic areas (i.e., Canada, Sweden, Russia, etc) sample density may be considerably lower owing to the greater transport distance and the logistical difficulties of collecting samples.  Anomalous areas are then re-sampled at a greater sample density.

The traditional kimberlitic indicator minerals are rare to non-existent in lamproite, thus other minerals (zircon, phlogopite, K-richterite, armalcolite, priderite) may be considered that unfortunately have low specific gravity, poor resistance, and are potentially difficult to identify. The better indicators for diamondiferous lamproite have been diamond and magnesiochromite. 

To take advantage of the dispersion of kimberlitic indicator minerals, the size of samples are determined based on the environment.  For example, where there is a general lack of active streams, much larger samples are taken compared to regions with active drainages.  In areas with juvenile streams, samples are often panned on site to recover a few pounds of sample concentrates.  Recovered indicator minerals are tested for chemistry using an electron microprobe to identify those that have higher probability of originating from the diamond stability field.  The data are plotted on maps to facilitate evaluation.

Geomorphology. Kimberlite and olivine lamproite are often pervasively serpentinized, making outcrops the exception rather than the rule.  In many cases, geomorphic expressions of pipes are subtle to unrecognizable. The Kimberley pipe in South Africa was expressed as a slight mound, but nearby pipes (i.e., Wesselton pipe) were expressed as subtle depressions. Others produced subtle modifications of drainage patterns (Mannard 1968). In the subarctic, where glaciation has scoured the landscape, some kimberlites produce noticeable depressions filled by lakes. In the semi-arid region of Wyoming and Colorado, a few kimberlites are expressed as slight depressions, but most blend into the surrounding topography and may or may not have a subtle vegetation anomaly.

Depressioin over Maxwell diamondiferous kimberlite, one
of a few hundred untested diamond pipes in Colorado,
Wyoming and Montana.
In the Ellendale field, Western Australia, serpentinized diamondiferous olivine lamproites lie hidden under a thin layer of soil in a field of well-exposed leucite lamproite volcanoes. The Argyle lamproite and diamondiferous lamproites in the Murfreesburo area of Arkansas were also hidden by a thin soil cover.

Lineaments. Many kimberlites and lamproites are structurally controlled (Hausel and others, 1979; 1981; Macnae, 1979, 1995; Nixon, 1981; Atkinson, 1989; and Erlich and Hausel, 2002).  Controlling lineaments and fractures may be indicated by alignment of a cluster of intrusives or by the elongation of a pipe. In Lesotho, South Africa, Dempster and Richard (1973) reported a close association of kimberlite with lineaments: 96% of kimberlites were found along WNW trends, and many pipes were located where the WNW trends intersected WSW fractures.



During recent exploration, I was able to identify more than
300 cryptovolcanic structures in and surrounding the State
Line district. Many of these are likely kimberlites, but remain
untouched, such as these depressions in Colorado that sit
on distinct lineaments and adjacent to diamondiferous
kimberlites.
Lamproites in the Leucite Hills, Wyoming are found on the flank of the Rock Springs uplift where distinct E-W fractures lie perpendicular to the axis of the uplift (Hausel and others, 1995). In the West Kimberley province of Western Australia, some lamproites are spatially associated with the Sandy Creek shear zone, a Proterozoic fault. In the Ellendale field, several lamproites lie near cross faults perpendicular to the Oscar Range trend, even though the intrusions do not appear to be directly related to any known fault. The Argyle lamproite to the east has an elongated morphology suggestive of fault control, and intrudes a splay on the Glenhill fault (Jaques and others, 1986).

Remote Sensing. Kingston (1984) reported remote-sensing techniques are widely used to search for kimberlite: these include conventional and false color aerial photography, LANDSAT multispectral scanner satellite data, and airborne multispectral scanning.  Multispectral scanning data is used to identify spectral anomalies related to Mg-rich clays (i.e., montmorillonite), carbonate, and other material with silica deficits.  Image enhancement techniques (contrast enhancements, ratios, principal components and clustering) produce images that are optimum for discrimination of kimberlite and olivine lamproite soils. These and other photo images can be used to search for vegetation and structural anomalies. Airborne multispectral scanning provides higher resolution than LANDSAT, and can also be used to measure reflectance qualities of clay in soil.

Many pipes and dikes possess distinct structural qualities or vegetation anomalies that may allow detection on aerial photographs. Mannard (1968) reported kimberlites in southern and central Africa were identified on aerial photographs on the basis of vegetation anomalies, circular depressions or mounds, and/or tonal differences. Low-level aerial photographs (both conventional and false color infrared) have been used to locate kimberlite in the USSR (Barygin 1962) and in the US (Hausel and others, 1979, 2000, 2003).
Geophysical Surveys. Geophysical exploration has been successful in the search for hidden kimberlite and lamproite (Litinskii 1963a, b; Gerryts 1967; Burley and Greenwood 1972; Hausel and others, 1979, 1981; Patterson and MacFadyen 1984; Woodzick, 1980), particularly in districts where kimberlites have previously been discovered.  Contrasting geophysical properties are often favorable for distinguishing kimberlite, lamproite and minette from country rock.
INPUT™ airborne surveys are effective in identifying both serpentinized and weathered kimberlite owing to the combination of conductivity and magnetics used in INPUT™.  Rock exposures of kimberlite may yield magnetic signatures but are poorly conductive, while deeply weathered kimberlites are conductive but poorly magnetic.


Geonics EM31 worked very well over
buried and exposed weathered
conductive kimberlite.
Because of the relatively small size of the diamond host rock, close flight-line spacing is necessary. In an airborne INPUT™ survey over the State Line district, Wyoming, a flight-line spacing of 640 feet (200 m) effectively detected several kimberlites and identified distinct magnetic anomalies interpreted as blind diatremes (Patterson and MacFayden 1984). An aeromagnetic (200–400m line spacing) survey flown over parts of northeastern Kansas identified several anomalies, some of which were drilled resulting in the discovery of previously unknown kimberlites (i.e., Baldwin Creek, Tuttle, and Antioch kimberlites) (Berendsen and Weis, 2001).  Flight line spacings of 160 to 320 feet (50-100 m) were used for INPUT™, magnetics and radiometrics in the Ellendale field, Australia (Atkinson 1989; Janke 1983; Jaques and others, 1986). The olivine lamproites yielded distinct dipolar magnetic anomalies.

In the Yakutia province, Russia, ground magnetic surveys were used where differences between the magnetic susceptibility of kimberlite and the carbonate sedimentary country rock was high.  Anomalies as great as 5,000 gammas were also successfully detected from airborne surveys (Litinskii 1963b).  In Mali, West Africa, the magnetic contrast between kimberlite and schist and sandstone country rock resulted in 2,400-gamma anomalies over kimberlite (Gerryts 1967). In Lesotho, anomalies over kimberlite were comparable with those in the Yakutia province (Burley and Greenwood 1972).

Fipke and others (1995) indicated that barren peridotite phases in Arkansas yielded magnetic highs, but the diamondiferous phases were not detected.  In northeastern Kansas, Brookins (1970) reported large positive (550 to 5,000 gamma) and negative (0 to –2,800 gamma) anomalies over some kimberlites emplaced in regional sedimentary rocks. The sedimentary rocks had relatively low magnetic susceptibility making magnetic surveys an effective method for exploration.

Most kimberlites in the Colorado–Wyoming State Line district yielded small complex dipolar anomalies in the range of 25 to 150 gammas, with some isolated anomalies of 250 and 1,000 gammas (Hausel and others, 1979). Blue ground kimberlite tends to mask magnetic anomalies. In the Iron Mountain district, where much of the kimberlite is relatively homogeneous, massive hypabyssal-facies kimberlite, only weak to indistinct magnetic anomalies were detected (Hausel and others, 2000).

Gem-quality diamonds recovered from Wyoming kimberlite in 1979. Largest stone is about 1 carat.
Magnetite is replaced by hematite during weathering masking near-surface magnetic affinity. Clay produced during weathering promotes water retention, thus weathered blue ground over kimberlite may produce vegetation anomalies that are susceptible to detection by electrical methods.  For example, resistivity surveys in the Colorado–Wyoming State Line district detected apparent resistivity of 25 to 75 ohm-m over weathered kimberlite, compared with 150 to 2,250 ohm-m in the country rock granite (Hausel and others, 1979).

Resistivity of weathered lamproite may be lower than that of country rock, owing to the conductive nature of smectitic clay relative to illite, kaolinite and other clay minerals (Gerryts 1967; Janke 1983).  However, the Argyle olivine lamproite yielded moderate to strong resistivity anomalies (40-100 ohm/m) compared to the surrounding country rock (200 ohm/m) (Drew 1986).

Biogeochemical and Geochemical Surveys. Kimberlite and lamproite are potassic alkalic ultrabasic igneous rocks with elevated Ba, Co, Cr, Cs, K, Mg, Nb, Ni, P, Pb, Rb, Sr, Ta, Th, U, V and light rare earth elements (LREE).  The high Cr, Nb, Ni, and Ta may show up in nearby soils (Jaques 1998), but dispersion of these metals in soils is not extensive.  Stream-sediment geochemistry generally is not useful due to efficient dispersion of most metals in streams.  In the Colorado–Wyoming State Line district, Cominco American outlined several known kimberlite intrusives on the basis of Cr, Nb, and Ni soil geochemical anomalies.  However, dispersion patterns were restricted and of little use in exploration in this terrain.


Classical indicator minerals used to find kimberlite include picroilmenite,
chromite, chrome diopside, and spessartine and pyrope garnets. The
purple garnets are typical G10 (diamond-stability) peridotitic garnets
and the yellow orange are characteristic eclogitic garnet.
Gregory and Tooms (1969) found that Mg, Ni, and Nb anomalies did not extend farther than 0.36 mile (0.6 km) from the Prairie Creek lamproite, Arkansas.  Haebid and Jackson (1986) noted that soil geochemical anomalies (Co, Cr, Nb, Ni) were detected in sand and soil immediately above lamproite vents in the West Kimberley province, Australia.  Such anomalies could prove useful in the search for hidden olivine lamproites.  Gregory (1984) used lithochemistry to distinguish olivine lamproite from leucite lamproite on the basis of Mg, Ni, Cr, and Co ratios.

Bergman (1987) suggested that olivine lamproites are generally enriched in compatible elements relative to leucite lamproites as a result of the abundance of xenocrystal olivine in the former. Barren lamproites contain elevated alkali and lithophile contents (K, Na, Th, U, Y, and Zr) relative to diamondiferous (olivine) lamproites.  Diamondiferous lamproites possess twice the Co, Cr, Mg, Nb, and Ni, and half the Al, K, Na and as barren lamproites (Mitchell and Bergman, 1991), and lamproites have anomalous Ti, K, Ba, Zr, and Nb compared to most other rocks.  These components may favor the growth of specific flora or may stress local vegetation (Jaques 1998). The Big Spring vent, West Kimberley, Australia, is characterized by anomalous faint pink tones that reflect the growth pattern of grass on the vent (Jaques and others, 1986).

Many kimberlites in the Colorado–Wyoming State Line district will not support growth of woody vegetation resulting in open parks over kimberlite in otherwise forested areas.  These same kimberlites may support a lush stand of grass delineating the limit of the intrusive.  Distinct grassy vegetation anomalies over kimberlites in the Iron Mountain district were used successfully to map many intrusives (Hausel and others, 2000). The anomalies are especially distinct following a few days of rain in the late spring.

Some Siberian kimberlites support denser stands of larch (Larix dahurica) and abundant undergrowth of shrub willow (Salix) and alder (Alnus) compared to surrounding Cambrian carbonates. In central India, trees over the Hinota pipe are healthier, taller, and denser than those in the surrounding quartz arenite. This may be attributed to greater availability of K, P, micro-nutrients and water.


Vegetation anomaly followed over kimberlite at Iron Mountain, Wyoming.
The kimberlite underlies the thicker vegetation to the left and granite to the
right. We also noticed the presence of carbonate in the soil (left), with
periodic indicator minerals and also abundant diamondbacks (rattlers).
Vegetation over the Sturgeon Lake kimberlite in Saskatchewan was tested for 48 elements; the kimberlite showed a consistent spatial relationship with Ni, Sr, Rb, Cr, Mn and Nb, and to a lesser extent with Mg, P and Ba, and relatively high Ni concentrations occurred in dogwood twigs. In hazelnut twigs, Cr levels were greater than 15 ppm near the kimberlite but only 5 to 8 ppm elsewhere, and Nb was higher in hazelnut twigs.  Sr and particularly Rb were relatively enriched in some plant species on kimberlite. The Sr was probably derived from the carbonates associated with the kimberlite, whereas the Rb was derived from phlogopite.  Ni, Rb and Sr distribution and Cr enrichment associated with Mn depletion in the twigs could be used to identify nearby kimberlite.

MINING & MILLING

Economic diamond deposits depend on the average price of stones, the amount of waste material removed, mining methods, company politics, socioeconomics of the area, and many other factors. For example, a diamond deposit may be mined at a comparatively lower cost in a third world country due to the availability of an inexpensive labor force, although constructing an infrastructure in such an area could offset some of these benefits. Whereas in the US, high labor and mining costs require higher-value ore for commercial operation, however, an infrastructure may already be available nearby.


Lost Lake volcanoclastic structure (circular depression with structural
control and white carbonate-rich soil in center.
More than half of the world’s natural diamonds is mined from kimberlite and lamproite and the rest are mined from placers. Economic cutoff grades are typically >0.10 carats/tonne (Jaques 1998), but the grade is highly dependent on mining costs and the value of the recovered diamonds. Thus the economic cutoff grade will vary after considering these factors. Average ore grades range from a high of 6.8 carats/tonne for Argyle to a low of about 0.15 carat/tonne for Prairie Creek, Arkansas. Some of the rich crater facies lamproite mined at Argyle yielded grades as high as 20 carats/tonne. Most economic deposits yield >30% gem-quality diamonds.

Commercial deposits include narrow dikes to pipes of 100 to 5000 feet (30-1,500 m) across. Pipes range in surface area from 2.5 to 370 acres (1-150 ha) averaging about 30 acres (12 ha) (Jaques 1998). Diamond mines possess resources in the neighborhood of >10 million to 350 million tonnes of ore and the richest deposits contain reserves measured in the hundreds of millions of carats that are valued in the billions of dollars.

One of the first grease tables we constructed at the Wyoming Geological
Survey for my diamond projects. Diamonds are non-wettable and
will stick to grease. Other minerals will wash over the grease. We constructed
this using an old Wilfley table (we actually found in the trash on the UW
Campus) drive because the state was too cheap to give us any money
even though they were taking in $100s of millions in mineral taxes.
Open pit diamond mines are typically designed to recover as little as 100,000 tonnes to more than 10 million tonnes of ore per year.  Annual diamond production may range from several thousand carats to a few million carats.  For example, the Finsch mine, South Africa, produced about 5 million carats annually between 1981 and 1991, whereas annual diamond production for the extremely rich Argyle lamproite reached a record 39 million carats during the height of operation.

Even so, the average weight of diamonds from the Argyle lamproite was small (only <0.1 carat), and those from Ellendale lamproites are only 0.1 to 0.2 carat (Mitchell and Bergman 1991). The largest reported diamond from the Prairie Creek lamproite is 40.42 carats (Hausel 1998).  However, diamonds from some kimberlites are extraordinary: the largest diamond ever recovered was fist size and was mined from the Premier kimberlite, South Africa, and weighed 3,106 carats.



Diamond Extraction mills were constructed in the Colorado Wyoming State
Line district at the Sloan kimberlite and on the Kelsey Lake kimberlite
(above). Another portable mill was constructed on a trailer used at
Kelsey Lake and a fourth was built along the northern edge of Ft. Collins
by Cominco American. None of these were well designed and all rejected
many diamonds. This problem was documented at Kelsey Lake when a
company interested in purchasing the mine tested mill rejects. The first sample
processed yielded several diamonds (including a 6.2-ct stone).
This problem was serious as it basically resulted in questions as to what the
actual diamond grades of kimberlites were. How many
 macrodiamonds were lost? Other gemstones (chrome diopside and pyrope
were all rejected at all four mills.
To evaluate a potential commercial diamond deposit, they must first be bulk sampled.  If favorable, additional bulk samples are used to assist in establishing ore grade maps to assist in a mine planning. Samples are taken on the surface and from drilling in order to achieve a three dimensional view of ore grades. If the pipe is considered to be economic, planning is completed for an initial open pit design and a mill placed near the pipe. Open pit mining typically proceeds from a spiral road developed from the rim of the pit toward the center of the pipe. As mining proceeds, the country rock is cut back in steps to aid in supporting the highwalls of the open pit. Mining in the pit may occur in an oval pattern, or in a polygonal pattern (Bruton 1979).

As mining continues and the pipe narrows at depth, the open pit will shrink to smaller and smaller diameters. Mining operations may ultimately continue underground using bulk recovery by block caving. However, less than 30% of diamond mines are continued underground. And to do so, the diamond ore must be relatively high value, because the cost of underground mining is considerably higher and the amount of ore recovered is considerably lower. Some kimberlites in Siberia and South Africa have been mined to depths of 3,540 feet (1,080 m). Open pits may have mine lives of 2 to 50 years (Jaques 1998).

Following recovery of rock mined from open pit operations, the ore is crushed and screened. Screening separates mid-size from larger material rejects and from material too small to contain commercial diamonds. Decisions on the maximum screen size must weigh the cost of processing additional material with the loss of potentially priceless large diamonds.

The typical diamond mill has a basic flow sheet that begins with primary milling and continues to primary gravity concentration, secondary concentration, magnetic separation, attrition milling.  The final diamond extraction stage uses grease table, electrostatic separation, and/or x-ray fluorescence extraction (Bruton 1979). 

Placer mines are different. The size of a placer mine will vary from a small one-man operation to a full-scale mine using bulldozers, scrapers and/or dredges.  Paystreaks are identified in streams or beaches: mining is then completed using small-scale or large-scale earth moving equipment (Bruton 1979).

GEMOLOGY

The primary monetary value for diamond is as gemstones. Diamond prices vary considerably. There are approximately 5,000 diamond categories with prices that vary from $0.5/carat up to several tens of thousands of dollars/carat (for large uncut or colored “fancy” diamonds) (Miller 1995).  Many faceted diamonds are worth many times an equivalent weight in gold or platinum.  Rough gemstone diamonds have values as high as 100 or more times that of industrial diamonds. After the diamonds are faceted, the value of the gem can increase another 10 to 100 fold, and the final placement of a stone in jewelry will again add another increase in the value of the stone. Thus any mining operation should consider not only recovery of the gems, but also the fashioning of the gems and marketing.


14.2 carat diamond recovered at Kelsey Lake (Photo
courtesy of Howard Coopersmith.
Diamonds include some of the more valuable gemstones on earth, and arguably are the most valuable of all commodities based on weight. For example, some Argyle pink diamonds have sold for as much as $1 million (US) per carat (one carat weighs only 0.2 grams [0.007 ounce]). Thus, an equivalent weight in gold would only be worth $2.80 (at $400/ounce)!  The extreme value of diamond is due to its mystique, rarity, extreme hardness, high refractive index and dispersion that can result in brilliant gems with distinctive “fire” when faceted and polished.

Four general types of natural commercial diamonds are recognized. These are gem (well-crystallized and transparent), bort (poorly crystallized, gray, brown translucent to opaque), ballas (spherical aggregates formed of many small diamonds), and carbonado (opaque, black to gray, tough, and compact). Gem diamonds are further subdivided into gem and near-gem (low-quality gemstones).

The fashioning of diamond “rough” into a finished gem may require up to six steps that include marking, grooving, cleaving, sawing, girdling, and faceting (Hurlbut and Switzer 1979). Whether or not all of these steps are used depends on the size, shape, and quality of the rough stone. There are three traditional types of cuts: step-, rose-, and brilliant-cut (Milashev 1989).

620 carat diamond from African Craton.
The value of finished gem diamonds is judged by the “four C’s” known as cut, clarity, carat weight, and color. The cut of a diamond can increase its value tremendously, and the better proportioned, polished and faceted, the greater its value. When the girdle (base) and table of the diamond are proportioned correctly, the diamond will exhibit greater fire and brilliance.

Diamonds may be graded using the Gemological Institute of America’s color grading system.  This ranges from D (colorless) to X (light yellow). Each letter of the alphabet from D to X shows a slight increase in yellow tinge that is generally not apparent to the untrained eye (Hurlbut and Switzer 1979).  Fancy diamonds are separated from colorless diamonds into groups based in color and intensity (Bruton 1978).  Clarity is determined by the presence or absence of blemishes, flaws, and inclusions. One typical grading system ranges from Fl (flawless) to I3 (imperfect) with intermediate grades of VVS1 (very, very slightly imperfect), VVS2, VS1, VS2, SI1, SI2, I1, and I2.

USE
The diamond industry is a multi-billion dollar mega-industry. The unique physical and optical properties of diamond also make it indispensable and irreplaceable for many industrial uses in addition to personal adornment in jewelry.

Due to its extreme hardness, industrial and synthetic diamonds are used extensively as abrasives in grinding, drilling, cutting and polishing.  Diamond also has chemical, electrical, optical and thermal characteristics that make it the best material available for wear and corrosion resistant coatings, special lenses, heat sinks in electrical circuits, wire drawing, drilling, and many other advanced technologies. One significant future application will be in computer chips due to their unmatched thermal conductivity and resistance to heat, since a tremendous amount of heat can pass through diamond without causing damage.


Wyoming diamond with distinct trigons on its surface.
Today's speedy microprocessors run hot - upwards to 200oF, and microprocessors can't run much faster without failing. Diamond microchips would be able to handle much higher temperatures allowing them to run at speeds that would liquefy ordinary silicon. But manufacturers have not considered using the precious stone, because it has never been possible to produce large diamond wafers affordably.  The Florida-based company Gemesis and the Boston company Apollo Diamond plan to use the diamond jewelry business to finance attempts to reshape the semiconducting world.

At room temperature, diamond is the hardest known material with the highest thermal conductivity of any material. Even though diamond is more expensive than competing abrasive materials such as garnet, corundum, and carborundum, diamond has proven to be cost effective in several industrial processes as it cuts faster and lasts longer than rival material. Synthetic industrial diamond is superior to natural industrial diamond in that it can be produced in unlimited quantities and tailored to meet specific applications. Consequently, manufactured diamond accounts for more than 90% of the industrial diamonds used in the US.

According to the US Geological Survey, much synthetic industrial diamond produced domestically was used as grit and powder. The major use was in machinery (27%), mineral services (18%), stone and ceramic products (17%), abrasives (16%), contract construction (13%), transportation equipment (6%), and miscellaneous uses (3%). Industrial diamonds are consumed in the production of computer chips, in construction, in the manufacture of machinery, for mineral and energy exploration and mining, stone cutting and polishing, in transportation (infrastructure and vehicles). Stone cutting along with highway construction and repair are some of the largest users of industrial diamond.

Diamond has one significant limitation in industrial use: it reacts with iron at high temperature causing the diamond to revert to graphite resulting in high rates of wear. In an iron rich environment, diamond may be uneconomical to use in comparison to other conventional abrasives, i.e., aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, and boron nitride. Even though these are considerably softer than diamond, they are suitable as high performance abrasives on ferrous work-pieces.

Diamond use has increased in both jewelry and industrial applications. One reason for the increase is due to the development of diamond synthesis technology making it possible to produce diamond abrasives for specific applications. In the past the only option was to use natural diamond, which had to be sorted by size and crushed, or by surface treatment such as rounding.  However, synthetic diamond abrasives can now be produced under a controlled environment such that the shape of the crystal can be made irregular and sharp.

Diamond has many potential exotic applications. For example, the Venus probe was fitted with a transparent diamond window since diamond was the only material transparent to infrared light which could withstand the extreme cold and vacuum of space and the extreme high temperatures and atmospheric pressures of Venus’s atmospheric (temperatures as high as 920°F, and pressures a hundred times that of earth) (Ward, 1979). Another exotic use gives a whole new meaning to the family jewels. LifeGem in Illinois started manufacturing diamonds from cremated human ashes for jewelry for surviving relatives. The cost for a family jewel is reported to be more than $2000 for a 0.25 carat stone.

Arkansas diamonds (photo from Glenn Worthington).
Diamond has applications in high-energy physics. Diamond windows are used in high-power lasers due to the high thermal conductivity, low absorption coefficient and a low value of temperature coefficient of refractive index.  Diamond anvils are used in high-pressure research, where pressures in excess of 4 megabars are needed.  Such ultra-high pressure research can simulate conditions in the core of the earth and planets. 

Diamonds are also used in dental drills and surgical blades, and provide cutting edges that are many times sharper than the best steel blades.  Since diamond has the greatest thermal conductivity of any material, pinhead size gold-coated diamonds are used in high capacity miniature transmitters that carry television and telephone signals.

Synthetics. Synthetic gem diamonds and simulants are becoming more common on the marketplace. These include cubic zirconia and mossainite. Mossainite has twice the fire of natural diamond, is doubly refracting (unlike diamond and cubic zirconia which are singly refractive) and has a hardness of 9.25 –thus both mossainite and cubic zirconia can easily be scratched by diamond. Double refraction is detectable in mossainite when viewing the front of the stone.  The back facets will appear to be duplicated due to the double refraction –except when viewing down the optic axis where light is singly refractive. The optic axis is usually perpendicular to the table of mossianite, thus one must observe the back facets through another facet to see evidence of double refraction.

Synthetic gem-quality diamonds may be produced in about 24 hours. Some stones weighing up to 3 carats have been produced for a few hundred dollars (uncut). Most are yellow, but some Russian stones are clear. In 1971, facet quality synthetic diamonds were grown by General Electric that is nearly colorless (0.3 and 0.26 carats).   

The colorless gemstones caused concern in the jewelry trade. Diamond simulants can be detected by a simple thermal conductivity test, but most jewelers were unprepared to distinguish faceted synthetic diamond from natural faceted diamond. Thus, DeBeers developed a diamond verification instrument known as DiamondView which uses ultraviolet fluorescence to distinguish colorless natural diamond from synthetic diamond. In addition, many synthetic diamonds examined by GIA contain metallic inclusions in high enough abundance that they are able to attract a magnet. Non-faceted synthetic diamonds exhibit a unique crystal habit of a cuboctohedron with a flat base. Synthetic diamonds also exhibit unusual dendritic and striated surface patterns.  According to Shigley and others (1997), because of the technological challenges and high cost of production, it is unlikely that fashioned gem-quality diamonds larger than 25 points will impact the gemstone industry in commercial quantities. 

FUTURE OF THE DIAMOND INDUSTRY
Diamonds have intrinsic value because of unique hardness, transparency and thermal conductivity. Diamonds will be needed as long as we have industrialized nations. Without any foreseeable major economic disasters, the future of the diamond industry should remain strong. 

As science and industry advance, additional applications will likely be found for diamond in the electronics industry. Demand for diamonds for drilling in exploration for oil, gas, and minerals, as well as in the construction industries is anticipated to increase.  Some technological advances will demand both natural and synthetic diamond in the future. 

However, the continual decline in new mines and decline in mineral and oil and gas exploration in the US will undoubtedly affect demand for industrial diamonds, but this decline will probably be more than offset by progressive nations where environmental extremism is not rampant.  In particular, the economic boom in China will result in increased demand for diamonds for industrial and engineering applications. 

For many years, the gem diamond industry was controlled by DeBeers: a monopoly so powerful that the diamond industry and DeBeers were thought by many to be the same. But the discovery of significant diamond resources outside of Africa has diminished DeBeers’s monopoly. 

The first real threat to the monopoly occurred with the discovery of significant gem-diamond deposits in the USSR in the 1950s, but communistic bureaucracy could not compete with South Africa, and the Soviet diamonds did not greatly affect the market (Erlich and Hausel, 2002). A major diamond discovery (Argyle) in Western Australia in the 1980s started the real first erosion of the monopoly.  However, the Argyle deposit, though rich in diamonds was dominated by industrial stones, and the gemstones recovered from the mine were small. Even so, the Australian company Ashton Mining, decided to market their own production.   

Some gemstones produced by Argyle included rare pink diamonds.  Marketing strategies by the Australians were brilliant, resulting in the Argyle Pinks becoming some of the more valuable gemstones on earth.  A large population of the Argyle diamonds was also brown to greenish brown that had been considered by the jewelry trade as industrial or near gem.  These were marketed as burgundy and cognac diamonds, and the marketing strategy effectively resulted in these stones becoming highly sought gemstones. Even so, many of the Argyle diamonds were small, and required special cutting skills taken up gem cutters in India and Sri Lanka.

The next major diamond discoveries were made on the North American Craton.  This is the largest Craton with the largest Archon core in the world. Based on the shear size of the craton, and the many finds of detrital diamonds in glacial moraines, this craton should have been a high-priority target for diamond exploration groups.  But for many years, the North American craton was ignored. 

The discovery of economic diamond deposits in this craton was the result of unrelenting prospecting by geologist Chuck Fipke. The discovery set off the greatest rush in modern history, and resulted in the development of a diamond industry in Canada. 

Part of a day's diamond recovery from Argyle, Austraila in 1986
Diamond production began in Canada following the capitalization of BHP’s Ekati mine at more than $700 million. A few other mines have now been developed and in April 2004, the value of diamond production from Canada surpassed that of South Africa! This occurred in 6 short years. In the future, we can expect many more discoveries of diamondiferous kimberlite in the North American Craton. To date, as many as 500 kimberlites and some unconventional host rocks have been identified in Canada –nearly 50% contain diamonds; thus the North American craton could easily become the number one source of diamonds in the near future. 

The North American craton extends across the Canadian border into the United States where several diamond deposits have been found.  Even so, much of the terrain in the US has not been prospected, or only partially explored for diamonds. Many exploration targets remain inexplicably unexplored. To date, only two deposits have been mined for diamonds in the US – one in the Colorado-Wyoming State Line district, and another near Murfreesburo, Arkansas.  Little is expected to be done in the US because of the current political climate and widespread environmentalism.

Diamond in matrix of Chinese kimberlite (GemHunter collection).
Diamond exploration in the near future will continue to focus on Canada, where the geology and political climate is favorable.  In addition to discoveries of diamonds in kimberlite and some lamproites, one might anticipate additional diamond discoveries in some unconventional host rocks such as minettes, alnoites, other lamprophyres, komatiites, and in particular, subduction zone related breccias.

One concern that has risen is the production of relatively inexpensive gem-quality diamonds.  However, gem-quality natural diamonds are also relatively inexpensive until they are faceted and mounted in jewelry.  Overall, the synthetic gemstones may cost less, but the price difference may not great.  And it is human nature to want an original, or the real thing, rather than an imitation.  Gem-quality synthetic diamonds will probably not affect the jewelry market.

CONCLUSION
With the current trend of investment, exploration and progressive pro-mining atmosphere, it is anticipated that Canada will be a leading diamond producer for decades to come. The shear size of the North American Craton allows one to predict Canada to become the world’s primary source for diamonds in the future. Unless there is a major change in attitude of the US government and population, little is expected to be produced in the US, even though parts of the US (i.e., Superior and Wyoming Provinces) are underlain by this craton. The importance of the North American Craton in the future of the diamond industry has resulted investments of hundreds of millions of dollars in exploration in North America.