Ch. 5: South African Diamonds

Ch. 5: South African Diamonds Page of 153 Ch. 5: South African Diamonds Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
THE BOOK OF DIAMONDS
It is a mistake to speak of "river washings". The dia-mantiferous deposits are not special to the old or recent river beds, but appear to be alluvial deposits spread over a large tract of country by the agency of water, which at some period of time subsequent to the filling up of the vol­canic pipes planed off and projected from the surface of the country. Thus the debris was scattered broadcast over the land. The larger diamonds and other heavy minerals would naturally seek the lowest places, corresponding with the river bed, past and present.
At Klipdorn near Kimberley the diamantiferous earth is remarkably like river gravel, is of a strong red color—quite different from the Kimberley blue ground—and forms a layer from one to eight feet thick.
The surface of the country round Kimberley is covered with a ferruginous (iron like) red, adhesive, sandy soil which makes horse traffic very heavy. Below the red soil is a basalt, much decomposed and highly ferruginous, from twenty to ninety feet thick, and lower still from two hun­dred to two hundred and fifty feet of black slaty shale con­taining carbon and iron pyrites. These are known as Kim­berley shales; they are very combustible, and in a part of DeBeer's Mine where they were accidentally fired they smouldered for over eighteen months.
By 1889 mining below the bottom of the pits by means of shafts and underground tunnels had been commenced. Modern methods date from this time when Cecil Rhodes and Alfred Beit secured control of the DeBeer company.
The scene of native mining was now transferred from
42
Ch. 5: South African Diamonds Page of 153 Ch. 5: South African Diamonds
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
bullet Tag
This Page