Portal logo
PROPERTIES AND TESTS FOR DIAMONDS
show quite black. It is claimed that this method will make it impossible to substitute stones of lesser value for real dia­monds. All the possessor of the diamond needs to do is to get an ultraviolet ray picture made of them before tem­porarily giving up the stones and then have a second pic­ture made when they are returned. This method will make it possible to decide the exact quality of any diamond with almost mathematical accuracy.
There are two kinds of imperfections or flaws: those which are inherent and others arising from imperfect cut­ting.
Of the former, black, or carbon spots are the most dis­cernible. They range from specks so small that it is difficult sometimes to discover them with a magnifying glass, to spots and broken, ragged clusters, quite plain to the naked eye. They are formed often of uncrystallized carbon or por­tions of the original element which did not crystallize with the rest but took one of the other forms of carbon, that is, graphite or carbonado, probably the latter, and were in­cluded in that which did crystallize. Others are inclusions of foreign matter, iron, etc. They are considered bad imper­fections because they are so easily detected by the naked eye. It is worthy of observation, however, that the blackest and most abrupt carbon spots are usually found in the whitest and finest diamonds. They remind one of human nature, in which the flaws of great talent are more than ordinarily bad. Not only do black spots look blacker when set in material of peerless color and splendor, but they are blacker. Where carbon appears in the lower grade dia-
75