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Ch. 1: Diamonds of India

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DIAMONDS.                            17
Malcolmson, and Voysey, have all left on record ac­counts of them.
-Mr. King's already mentioned report containing the latest and most authentic account of them, it will be best, perhaps, to quote from it a few passages verbatim, at the same time stating that Mr. King refers those who are likely to be specially interested to Dr. Heyne, for an account of the mines as they appeared in his day.
Mr. King writes :—
The quartzites of the Banaganpilly group form a cap, resting uncomformably on the denuded surface of a much older set of shales and traps with some limestone bands. .... The quartzite covering is from 20 to 30 feet in thickness ; and it is pierced here and there over the Banaganpilly end of the hill, by shafts of 15 feet or less, from the bottoms of which nearly horizontal galleries are run to get at the seams of diamond gangue. The cap­ping is composed of compact grits and sandstones in thickish beds above, and somewhat thinner bedded towards the bottom.
Externally the rocks are hard and vitreous. At the level of the galleries there are beds of coarse pebbly con­glomerate, occasionally a breccia, which are sandy and clayey, and with these run seams of more shaley and clayey stuff. There is no trace of the clayey constitution on the outside along the outcrop, nor are there any dis­tinct bands of shales ; there are only some sandy shales
down at or near the bottom of the series.....
In the mines the coolies were picking out a seam of about six or eight inches in thickness, occurring with thicker and harder beds of sandstone, and which they said was the diamond layer; this rock when brought to light turned out to be an easily broken up damp clayey conglomerate and partly breccia, of small rounded frag­ments and pebbles of black, red, green, and pale-coloured shales and cherts, and of quartzite with large and small C
Ch. 1: Diamonds of India Page of 143 Ch. 1: Diamonds of India
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Ball. Diamonds Coal and Gold of India.
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