Sources of DiamondsSources of DiamondsHistorically diamonds were found in alluvial deposits in southern India which are now worked out. Most diamond deposits are in Africa, notably in South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, the Republic of the Congo and Sierra Leone. Revolutionary groups in some of those countries have taken control of diamond mines, using the conflict diamonds to finance their operations. There are also commercial deposits in the Northwest Territories of Canada, the Russian Arctic, Brazil and in Northern and Western Australia. Occasionally diamonds have been found in glacial deposits in Wisconsin and Indiana. The Wisconsin finds can be explained by recent Canadian discoveries, but the diamonds found in Indiana must have come from an as yet undiscovered source in Quebec as the movement of ice was from northeast to southwest. Tiny nanometer sized diamonds, often called nanodiamonds, are also found as presolar grains in primitive meteorites. Diamonds have been manufactured aritficially for over fifty years, and very recently companies began marketing them to the public as jewelry and in technology. For more information see Artificial diamond. A city of major importance in diamond trade is Antwerp, Belgium. It is estimated that nearly 90% of the world's rough diamonds, 50% of cut diamonds, and 40% of industrial diamonds trade hands in Antwerp. The industry is represented by the Diamond High Council (HRD). Before Antwerp the port city of Bruges saw most diamond trade, holding its position since the 13th century. Toward the 15th century Bruges declined, its port choked with silt. Antwerp had been the world centre of diamond trade since the 16th century, until the city's 1585 capture by the Spanish. Amsterdam then supplanted Antwerp as a trading centre, until the latter's resurgence beginning in the 19th century.
Most diamonds are mined in Russia, South Africa, and more recently in the Northwest Territories of Canada.
"What makes you think of South Africa--and of diamonds?" she asked.
"Oh, well--but that comes into my tale," answered Guyler. "You'll see in due course. But--had it?" "I hadn't thought of diamonds, but I certainly had of South Africa," admitted Zillah. -- from The Orange-Yellow Diamond by J. S. Fletcher |
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About Diamonds | Diamond Buying Guide | Carats | Diamond Clarity | Diamond Cuts | Diamond Color | Colored Diamonds | Conflict Diamonds | Cullinan Diamond | Properties of Diamonds | How to Tell if a Diamond is Real | Famous Diamonds | How to Buy A Diamond
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