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388                      THE DIAMOND
Vertical rents in the plateau were made in the process, into which a magma of ultra-basic rock exuded from the interior, and a mass of hydrocarbonated material poured from the surface, forming an agglomerate hav­ing the characteristic of an altered eruptive rock, yet differing from any other lava known.
Owing to the precipitation of carbonaceous surface; material into the magma confined in the depths of the vertical fissures, processes ensued which segregated the carbon in the mass and crystallized it as diamond.
The cooling and cooled mass was raised in the chim­neys by successive uplifts, occasioned by the generation of gases within the mass and the settlings of the earth's crust.
The yield of diamond will decrease as the rock passes from an agglomerate of igneous lava and surface material, into the underlying eruptive rock which was not reached by the surface admixture.
Inasmuch as it is the brecciated kimberlite only which contains the diamonds, and the breccia though some­what altered, has not been fully amalgamated with the ground-mass, the kimberlite was not in a state of igni­tion when the diamonds were crystallized.
The chemical reactions whereby the carbon was crys­tallized, remains a subject for speculation and the ex­periments of scientists, but it appears probable that it was accomplished in the African diamond chimneys by the passage of superheated steam through an agglomer­ate of magma while being cooled by carbonaceous material and water poured into it from above. That the crystallization of carbon as diamond does not de­pend absolutely upon the geologic structure, during