Portal logo
814
MINERAL RESOURCES.
some of it contains so much copper that it is crushed and smelted along with the regular ore. The gem material varies in color from pure opaque enamel white in a compact granular variety to cream, yellowish, pink, and purplish in more translucent material. There are also dark to black streaks and mottlings through the massive datolite of different colors. The colors in the datolite are due to the presence of native copper more or less finely divided. Apparently the purplish tints are due to extremely finely divided copper, and the pink and yellow tints are caused by larger scales and particles of cop­per visible to the naked eye or through a hand glass. Some-of the specimens are attached to trap rock, much epidotized in places with native copper. These specimens furnish attractive material for small ornaments and some are suitable for gems. The datolite is cut into stones for scarf pins, cuff buttons, watch charms, etc. They are sold by jewelers in the copper-producing section of Michigan and also more widely in the gem markets.
DIAMOND.
UNITED STATES.
Arkansas.—A pamphlet issued by the Arkansas Diamond Com­pany of Little Rock, containing the statements of the original in­vestors, the mining engineer, and the geologist of the company will prove of interest to many people. An article giving an outline of the discovery, developments, and possibilities of the deposit has been written also by the company's mining engineer, John T. Fuller." Mr. Fuller calls attention to the fact that the term "blue ground" is a misnomer and is little understood by the average prospector. The "blue" refers to the bluish-green color of the unweathered serpentinized peridotite encountered below the zone of yellow weathered material at the surface. On exposure to weather, the "blue," which is really in the form of rock, disintegrates to a grayish-green or yellowish-green friable mass which is more properly a 'ground." The peridotite of the Arkansas Diamond Company mine is essentially similar to that of the South African diamond mines. Since the peridotite in the latter mines varies greatly in appearance, not only in different mines but often in different parts of the same mine, it is not expected that a close comparison between details can be made. The occurrence of the Arkansas peridotite in the form of a pipe, the manner in which it weathers, the presence of unaltered portions called "hardibank," and of minerals commonly found asso­ciated with diamonds are points of similarity.
On over half of the area of the peridotite outcrop the rock has weathered to depths varying from 20 to 60 feet, so that it will require but a minimum of blasting to mine. The material that can be thus removed is estimated at 1,500,000 cubic yards. In the work of testing the deposit the yield of diamonds was promising and amounted to 540 stones, of which 505 weighed together 217 carats. Three cut stones were found to be brilliant and were valued at from $60 to $175 per carat, with an average value of $104 per carat. A parcel of rough unsorted stones from the mine will be easily worth $10 per carat. The only way to obtain a true idea of the value or possibilities
a Eng. and Min. Jour., January 16,1909.