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Ch. 3: Diamond

Ch. 3: Diamond Page of 451 Ch. 3: Diamond Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
28 A Book of Precious Stones
and prairie washings. The river deposits are rolled quartz pebbles, mixed with or united by a ferruginous clay of which the usual founda­tion is talcose clays. Associated minerals in­clude, rutile, hematite, ilmenite, quartz, kyanite, tourmaline, gold, garnet, and zircon. The finest stones result from the prairie washings, where the diamonds occur in a conglomerate of quartz fragments overlaid by earth or sand. Bagagem is a productive locality, and there a fine stone weighing 247-1/2 carats was found. Abatehe, Minas Geraes, is another important field. Dia­monds are also found at Lencaes, Bahia; along the river Cacholira, chiefly at Surua and Sinorca, and on the Salobro and other branches of the Pardo River.
The world's diamond markets to-day are al­most entirely supplied by the diggings in South Africa, where the discovery of diamonds was so recent as 1867. Children are accredited with the finding of the diamond in South Africa. A Boer farmer, Daniel Jacobs, had a farm near the present town of Barkly West on the Vaal River. On the river's strand were many glitter­ing and coloured pebbles, the only playthings the Jacobs children could get; these pebbles in­cluded carnelian, agates and many varieties of
Ch. 3: Diamond Page of 451 Ch. 3: Diamond
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