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Ch. 1: Diamonds of India

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24
DIAMONDS.
they found a great number of stones from ten to forty carats, and sometimes bigger, among the rest that large stone that weighed 900 carats, which Mirimgola presented to Aurengzeb.*
After the miners have pitched upon the place where they intend to work they level another place close by, of the same extent, or else a little bigger, which they enclose with a wall about two feet high. In the bottom of that little wall, at the distance of every two feet, they make small holes to let in the water, which they stop up after­wards till they come to drain out the water again. The place being prepared the people that are to work meet all together, men, women, and children, with the workmaster in the company of his friends and relations. Then he brings along with him some little image of the god that they adore.
After worship of this and a feast of rice, Tavernier continues :—
When the feast is over the men fall to digging, the women and children to carry earth to the place prepared in that manner as I have already described. They dig ten, twelve, and sometimes fourteen feet deep, but when they come to any water they leave off.
All the earth being carried into the place before men­tioned, the men, women, and children throw the water which is in the drains upon the earth, letting it soak for two or three days according to the hardness of it, till it comes to be a kind of batter, then they open the holes in the wall to let out the water and throw on more water still, till all the mud be washed away and nothing left but the sand. After that they dry it in the sun, and then they winnow the sand in little winnows as we winnow our corn.
.... The earth being thus winnowed, they spread it with a kind of rake, as thin as they possibly can ; then
* This by some authorities is thought to have been the Koh-i-nur. If so it was found about the year 1550.
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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