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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 IN OLD DAYS
by little overhead runners and crooks. Arrived at the level of the platform the bucket was tipped into a narrow shoot, down which the ground ran into a bag held ready to receive it, in which it was conveyed away to be sorted. The din and rattle of these thousands of wheels and the twang of the buckets along the ropes were something deafening, while the mine itself seemed almost darkened by the thick cobweb of ropes, so numerous as to appear almost touching. This mode of haulage continued in vogue during the whole of 1873, and if the appearance of the mine was less picturesque than when the roadways existed, it was, if anything, more unique. By moonlight, particularly, it was a weird and beautiful sight."
The mine was now threatened in two other quarters. The removal of the blue ground took away the support from the walls of the pipe, and frequent falls of reef occurred, not only covering up valuable
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Ch. 2: Kimberley & Its Diamond Mines Page of 171 Ch. 2: Kimberley & Its Diamond Mines
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