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Ch. 6: South African Diamonds II

Ch. 6: South African Diamonds II Page of 153 Ch. 6: South African Diamonds II Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
THE BOOK OF DIAMONDS
which today are worth millions of dollars. These farms make up the important part of the DeBeer's Consolidated Mines which controls ninety-five per cent of the diamond output of the world.
These mines on this land have been worked so thor­oughly today that some of them are 3,000 feet down in the ground and are kept from caving in only by the great­est engineering knowledge.
The five diamond mines or craters (of Kimberley) are all contained in a circle three and one-half miles in diam­eter. They are irregularly shaped round or oval pipes, ex­tending vertically towards to an unknown depth, retaining about the same diameter throughout. They are said to be volcanic necks filled from below with a heterogeneous mix­ture of fragments of the surrounding rocks, and of older rocks such as granite, mingled and cemented with bluish-colored, hard clayey mass, in which famous blue clay the imbedded diamonds are hidden.
The diamond fields at Kimberley funnel their way up from a great depth in the foundations of the earth crust, widening as they approach the surface. There they vary from about 60 feet to a half-mile across. There is a series of tunnels forty feet below each other in one of these spans. At the top is that rotted yellow rock which hardens as you go deeper until it passes into a hard, igneous rock called the blue ground, or Kimberlite. After careful observa­tions Dr. Stelzner and others have reached the conclusion that the blue ground is of volcanic origin and was forced up from below. There are no beds of sand and gravel into
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Ch. 6: South African Diamonds II Page of 153 Ch. 6: South African Diamonds II
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