Quantcast

Ch. 9: Diamond

Ch. 9: Diamond Page of 237 Ch. 9: Diamond Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
PRECIOUS STONES
77
by some mineral for which it had an affinity, became, by natu­ral processes of heat, pressure, and cooling, solidified and crystallized.
Whatever the processes of nature were, the attempts to make them artificially have shown that the forces and time necessary are beyond our compass. Science and present means at its disposal have succeeded only in making a few very minute and imperfectly crystallized particles, sufficient to illustrate vaguely the larger method of nature.
The qualities which make the diamond valuable are its extreme hardness, great lustre, and the reflective, refractive, and dispersive powers which it possesses.
It is the hardest substance known, and for purposes of comparison is rated 10 in a scale running from 10 to I. On account of this excessive hardness, the ancients could only partially polish it, and did so by rubbing one rough diamond against another,—" bruting," as it was termed. This knowl­edge of its extraordinary hardness gave rise to an error which exists to some extent even now. It was said that it was so hard, one could be laid upon an anvil and struck with a hammer without danger to the stone. Many beautiful gems have been destroyed by this test, for though they are so hard that they will wear a way through any other sub­stance, they are also brittle, easily fractured, and, by pound­ing in a steel mortar, may be reduced to powder. They may be also worn away by constant rubbing against softer mate­rial. As rocks are worn away by the constant washing of water, so would friction with other substances, if persisted in, eventually wear even upon a diamond. In fact, Mawe says, " I am in possession of a globular diamond, upon the sur­face of which neither the naked eye nor the microscope is able to discover the smallest appearance of facets." He men­tions this to refute the statement that diamonds were never found as rolled pieces.
The degree of hardness varies in different crystals, and
Ch. 9: Diamond Page of 237 Ch. 9: Diamond
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page