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Ch. 5: Camps on the Vaal

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144 THE DIAMOND MINES OF SOUTH AFRICA
diamond-bearing gravel were buried under ground too deep for profitable working, or covered by the waste of flooded rivers.
As the mines advanced up the hillsides, following the course of the mountain streams, it was seen that there were gupiaras or deposits of diamond-bearing gravel along the steep slopes of the ravines, and these were worked by carrying the gravel to the banks of streams, or by cutting sluiceways to the deposits. Finally, on the sierran ridges and plateaus the conglomerate beds were reached, from which the deposits in the river beds had been washed by the mountain streams. This conglomerate was chiefly itacolumite, a micaceous sandstone, accompanied by mica-schist and penetrated irregularly by quartz veins. This was the prevailing composite in the Serro de San Antonio, in which the Jequetinhonha rises in the Serro de Matta de Corda, the fountain head of the Rio Francisco.
Here the diamonds were not as thickly sprinkled as they were in the cascalho concentrate, but the quantity was sufficient to make extraction profitable, if the conglomerate could be dis­integrated and w7ashed. This was effected by collecting rain water in pools at points above the conglomerate and carrying down the water through ditches into gullies cut in the beds. By the flow of the water, the formacao was separated from the mass of rocks and sand. This device worked well, but owing to the scarcity of water, the washing could only be continued for a few weeks, at most, in the course of a year. In 1832 mining in these fields was opened to the public, but the most accessible and prolific beds had been worked, and there was little apparent encouragement for the investment of capital in any large under­taking which might have advanced the science of diamond winning. It is said that more than half of the diamonds pro­duced in Brazil were stolen by the workmen and sold to contra­band dealers, by whom they were secretly sent out of the country.
Outside of the Indian and Brazilian fields no considerable source of supply had been discovered anywhere. Some dia­mond-bearing ground had been found in Borneo, which yielded for many years a dribbling return, and in 1829 the first-known
Ch. 5: Camps on the Vaal Page of 449 Ch. 5: Camps on the Vaal
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