Portal logo
before the waters, increased in volume, suddenly destroy it. The fall of water from the artificial sluice is often employed to turn a wheel to keep the old channel pumped dry, but little use is made of this power for other purposes. When the river bed has thus been laid bare, search is made with a long iron rod for huge pot-holes, known as caldeiros, which experience has shown are more likely to contain quantities of diamonds than the ordinary river bed. This is natural, since the diamonds resist longer than other stones the constant wear due to the whirling about of the water in the pot-holes and hence gather there. It is said that sometimes on removal of a little sand large aggrega­tions of pure diamonds are to be seen. A single small pot-hole is said to have yielded 8,000 carats, or about 6 pounds of diamonds. The caldeiros have now been nearly all dug over, however, and the finding of a new one is rare. The separation of the diamonds from the accompanying sand and gravel is usually performed by washing, in the manner thus described by Gorceix :*
" The sands are placed," he says, " in portions of two hundred to two hundred and fifty pounds, in a kind of hod or rectangular trough, only three sides of which are inclosed. The hods are arranged by twos, fours, or sixes by the side of a trough of water about a foot and a half deep so that their bottoms shall be slightly inclined toward it. A workman standing in the trough before each hod dashes water upon the sand in it. The clay and the very fine sands are carried away and the first separation is made. The larger pieces remaining in the top of the sand are picked away. The diamond is to be found in the two upper thirds of the mass that is left, the lower part being nearly sterile. The washing is afterward finished in bowls a little deeper and a little more conical than those used by the gold-washers. The washer puts the sand in the bowl and fills it with water; then by whirling the bowl and shaking it up and down while the sand is float­ing around in it, and being careful to stir it from time to time with his hand, he determines a classification in the order of density. This work would be easy if he were washing gold, for that metal is heavier than the substances with which it occurs, and always goes to the bot­tom. The diamond, however, having a density only about three and a half times greater than that of water, not much more than that of quartz and tourmaline, and less than that of the oxides of iron and titanium, its constant companions, settles in the middle layers. The washer, after several rinsings, removes the upper particles, hardly looking at them; and when he has reached a certain level, which his
* Popular Science Monthly, Vol. XXI., p. 616.
77