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Ch. 15: Diamond

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predicted the finding of diamonds here from the similarity of the gravels to those of Brazil in which diamonds are obtained.
Later finds of diamonds have been made near Ekaterinburg and in Werchne Uralsk and Troitzk in the Government of Orenburg; likewise in connection with auriferous sands.
Diamonds have also been found in Lapland in the vicinity of Var-anger Fjord on the Arctic Sea. They occur in river sands, together with garnet, quartz, rutile, and other minerals usually found accom­panying diamond. These diamonds are small and scarce.
British Guiana has recently come into prominence as a field which may produce a profitable supply of diamonds. Small stones were first found here about 1890, and work has been continued until now a con­siderable amount of mining is carried on. The locality is along the Upper Mazaruni River, two hundred and fifty miles south of the town of Bartica. The journey to it is a long and difficult one, all supplies requiring to be transported over a narrow trail through a tropical jungle. The diamonds occur in a formation of sandy clay with other pebbles and ironstone nodules. They are separated by washing the clay in sieves of one-sixteenth inch mesh to remove the fine particles, and are then picked out by hand. The yield is quite remunerative, nine men having in one instance obtained four hundred stones by working eighteen days. The stones are small in size, few being above two carats weight, but they are of good quality. Several companies have been organized to work the deposits, and a measurable output is likely to be obtained.
The occurrence of diamonds in the United States is largely confined to two regions; the first a belt of country lying along the eastern base of the southern Alleghanies from Virginia to Georgia, while the other extends along the western base of the Sierra Nevada and Cascade ranges in northern California and southern Oregon. There is also a third, of less importance, belonging to the Kettle moraine district of southern Wisconsin. One of the diamonds found in the southern Alleghanies weighed 23| carats. It was found in 1855 at Manchester, Virginia, and is usually known as the Dewey diamond from the name of its one-time owner. Eight or ten diamonds, varying from one to four carats in weight, have been found in various localities in North Carolina; ten or twelve counties in Georgia have furnished one or more small stones, and one or two are reported from South Carolina. These dia­monds have all been found loose in gravels, and have been obtained either while washing the gravels for gold, or in digging wells, or they have been picked up by children. A resemblance of certain strata in
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Ch. 15: Diamond Page of 252 Ch. 15: Diamond
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