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Ch. 3: Kimberley Mines, Present Day

Ch. 3: Kimberley Mines, Present Day Page of 171 Ch. 3: Kimberley Mines, Present Day Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
DIAMONDS
14 feet in diameter, furnished with ten arms each having six or seven teeth. The teeth are so set as to form a spiral, so that when the arms revolve the teeth carry the heavy deposit to the outer rim of the pan, while the lighter material passes towards the centre and is carried from the pan by the flow of water. The heavy deposit contains the diamonds. It remains on the bottom of the pan and near its outer rim. This deposit is drawn off every twelve hours by means of a broad slot in the bottom of the pan. The average quantity of blue ground passed through each pan is from 400 to 450 loads in ten hours. The deposit left in each pan after putting the above number of loads through amounts to three or four loads, which go to the pulsator for further concentration.
About 14 per cent of all the ground sent to the depositing floors is too hard to weather, so of late years crushing and concentrating plant has been erected to deal
Ch. 3: Kimberley Mines, Present Day Page of 171 Ch. 3: Kimberley Mines, Present Day
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