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4        ON A DIAMOND-BEARING PERIDOTITE AND
Prof. T. Eupert Jones and Mr. Thos. Davies had identified a number of the minerals occurring associated with the dia­mond. Mr. Dunn has described the occurrence so well that I cannot do better than quote some extracts from his paper.1
' The conditions under which diamonds occur in South Africa are quite different from those of ever}" other known locality, and are so unusual as to deserve the earnest attention of all geologists.
' At the junction, and back for a distance of from one to several feet, the edges of the shale are bent sharply upwards. The contents of these "pipes'' in the shale are the same in all cases, and show distinctly that they are of igneous origin. The base is more or less decomposed gabbro (?) or euphotide (?), through which are scattered particles, fragments, and huge masses of shale, nodules of dolerite, occasional fragments of chloritic schist, micaceous schist and gneiss. The principal foreign in­gredient is the shale, which in many places, particularly at Colesberg Kopje, is thoroughly comminuted, forming a breccia with euphotide (?) as a base. Where large masses of shale occur, the lines of the bedding, as might be expected, are not horizontal, but lie in all directions.
' For a depth of from 30 to 40 feet, cracks, joints, and irregular cavities filled with red sand from the surface penetrate; with the sand, and showing that it has come from the surface, are fragments of ostrich egg-shell, small rounded grains of chalcedony, agate, &c, identical with the same substances mixed with the surface soil.
' At 130 feet, the greatest depth so far attained, the rock becomes compact, tough, and shows the original texture, though the ingredients are altered, notably the pyroxene or augite into bronzite.2
' The entangled blocks of shale and sandstone arc fre­quently altered, the latter sometimes into quartz rock.
1   Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc, xxx. 1874, p. 54.
2  Probably diallage is here meant; the name bronzite, which formerly was used somewhat vaguely, being now restricted to a rhombic pyroxene.— T. G. B.