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Ch. 2: Kimberley & Its Diamond Mines

Ch. 2: Kimberley & Its Diamond Mines Page of 171 Ch. 2: Kimberley & Its Diamond Mines Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
KIMBERLEY AND ITS MINES
town, affectionately called " the camp " by the older inhabitants, are not beyond the galvanised iron stage, and the general appearance is unlovely and depressing. Reunert reckons that over a million trees have been cut down to supply timber for the mines, and the whole country within a radius of ioo miles has been denuded of wood with the most injurious effects on the climate. The extreme dryness of the air, and the absence of trees to break the force of the wind and temper the heat of the sun, probably account for the dust storms so frequent in summer. The temperature in the day frequently rises to ioo° in the shade, but in so dry a climate this is not unpleasant, and I felt less oppressed by this heat than I did in London the previous September. Moreover, in Kimberley, owing to the high altitude, the nights are always cool.
The approach to Kimberley is deadly dull. The country is almost treeless, and c                                17
Ch. 2: Kimberley & Its Diamond Mines Page of 171 Ch. 2: Kimberley & Its Diamond Mines
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