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Ch. 16: Origin of the Diamond

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386                      THE DIAMOND
notably New York State and Kentucky, without any, and in Arkansas though some diamonds have been found in a large body of it there, it is doubtful if that contains any considerable quantity. It is evident, therefore, that if the elements contained in kimberlite, under certain conditions, are requisite for the crystallization of car­bon, the presence of carbon and its crystallization have nothing to do with the peculiar formation of kimberlite. The South African chimneys are also traversed by dykes of kimberlite which contain few if any diamonds. It is the breccia, or more decomposed kimberlite containing the shale enclosures, which is diamondiferous. This black shale in the stratum surrounding the chimneys is combustible, but the fragments in the breccia have lost their sulphur and carbonaceous matter. Few diamonds are found in purely igneous or metamorphic rocks, though Henry Carvill Lewis referring to kimberlite says, " Certain resemblances can be traced to the ground-mass of sundry decomposed basaltic or other basal rocks." Sir H. E. Roscoe found on treating " blue ground" with hot water, " an aromatic hydrocarbon could be extracted, and by digesting it with ether and allowing the solution to evaporate, this hydrocarbon was separated and found to be crystalline, strongly aromatic, volatile, burning with a smoky flame and melting at 50° C."
These facts remind one again of the probable surface conditions existing at the time of the opening of the diamond chimneys through the earth's crust. It is noticeable too, that beyond the trace of hydrocarbon in the ground-mass, and the carbon in the calcite, which is a decomposed product, all the carbon which entered
Ch. 16: Origin of the Diamond Page of 448 Ch. 16: Origin of the Diamond
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