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It may be proper to add here a description of the process of cutting,
polishing, &c, the stones, as carried on at Cambay in the present
day.
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The most extensive consumption of Agates is required for the
manufacture of beads, of every variety of size and colour, which are in
demand for exportation to the African and Arabian coasts, as also for
the islands of Zanzibar and Mozambique, where they are bartered for
ivory, gold-dust, rhinoceros'-horns, &c. The stones are in the
first instance broken into small pieces by means of hammers, and the
beads are formed in the rough in the following manner :— An iron pin is
driven into the ground with the sharp point upwards. The person
operating places the part of the stone he wishes to break on this
point, and with a small hammer he strikes the stone and continues the
process until it has become partially round. This operation is
performed chiefly by women, boys, and young girls. The work is then
carried to another person, who proceeds with the operation. He has a
large slab of hard sandstone before him, placed in a sloping or
inclined position, and with a clam made of two pieces of wood,
with a joint at one end, with two nails in the centre by which the
stone is held ; he works the stone over the surface of the slab,
constantly changing its position, so that in a very short time it
becomes round. After this it goes to the polisher and then to the
driller. The hole is drilled by means of diamond dust and water. The
drill is supported on a small frame and worked by a long bow backwards
and forwards. Seals, &c, are all cut in this way, except those that
require fiat surfaces. This is effected by a lap, made of coarse lac and koorun (country
emery), and formed into a thin wheel, two feet in diameter, supported
on two pivots, and worked by a strap of leather pulled backwards and
forwards. Bloodstones, Agates, &c, are formed into various articles
by means of sheet-iron