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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
the diamantiferous ground, denudation has planed the surface and the upper parts of the craters, and other ordinary signs of volcanic activity being smoothed away, the superficial and ubiquitous red sand covered the whole surface. The Kimberley Mine seems to have presented a slight elevation above the surrounding flat country, while the sites of other mines were level or even slightly depressed. The Wesselton Mine, within a mile of Dutoitspan, has only been discovered a few years. It showed a slight depression on the surface, which had been used as a shoot for dry rubbish. There are other diamantiferous pipes in the neighbourhood, but they are small and do not contain stones in payable quantities. More recently another diamantiferous pipe has been discovered about 40 miles off, near Klipdam, and is now worked as the Leicester Mine. Other hoards of diamonds may also be near ; where there are no surface signs, and the pipe itself is hidden 23
Ch. 2: Kimberley & Its Diamond Mines Page of 171 Ch. 2: Kimberley & Its Diamond Mines
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