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DIAMONDS FOUND IN OTHER PARTS OF THE WORLD
of the farmers is to walk back and forth over the water-washed sands with, sabots of rye-straw, which pick up the sharp-pointed crystals. The sabots are then burned and the ashes sieved for the diamonds. The larger ones are picked up from the ground when seen during the tramp. Many of them are broken or splintered crystals, and as they are used chiefly for drill points, most of the unbroken crystals are broken up later for the purpose. A few are sold for gem purposes. Some of them are white, but a large majority are yellow or brownish-yellow.
The finders obtain a good price for the stones, as buyers visit the place regularly at certain seasons of the year and usually carry away the entire output. The quantity obtained is unknown, but the output of stones suitable for cutting to jewels is inconsiderable.
Very small diamonds have been found in meteorites from Australia, Russia, and Arizona. The meteorite that fell in Russia, September 22, 1886, contained one per cent of diamantoid carbon in the form of carbonado in small grayish grains. In the famous Canyon Diablo (Arizona) meteoric masses containing small black diamonds were found and in one piece there was discovered a tiny white diamond one fiftieth of an inch in diameter.
In finding diamonds in meteorites which are fused masses of iron principally has done much to establish the convic­tion that carbon in some form was crystallized into dia­monds in the earth by heat and pressure.
The most striking confirmation of the meteoric theory
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