Lake Superior Paper - The Genesis of the Diamond

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Gardner F. Williams
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
16
File Size:
594 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1905

Abstract

Chemically, the diamond is composed of the element carbon in its pure crystallized state. The diamond crystallizes in the isometric system, and the most common forms are the octahedron and dodecahedron, while the (24-sided) tetrahexa-hedron is not uncommon. Cube diamonds with beveled edges representing the combination 8 0 8 and 8 0 2 are occasionally found in the Bultfontein and Premier (Wesselton) mines at Kimberley, South Africa. The diamonds from various mines have distinctive forms of crystallization, or variations of the same forms, so characteristic that those familiar with South African diamond-mines and their products can determine positively from which mine any given parcel of diamonds has been obtained. It is not always possible to determine the source of each individual diamond, for similar stones are occasionally found in digerent mines; but these are exceptions to the rule. There is a difference in the luster, shape or crystalline form of the diamonds from the various mines that gives each mine some distinctive characteristic. In one mine nearly all of the crystals are sharp-edged octahedrons, while in another, dodecahedrons with rounded faces predominate. One might give no end of peculiarities of the diamonds from the various mines; but it will suffice for the purposes of this paper to state the fact that such distinctive characteristics do occur. From this observation it may be concluded that the diamonds in the mines of the Eimberley district, which occupies a small area (see Fig. I), did not have a common origin. The diamond is the most impenetrable of all known substances, and will scratch any other stone, or the hardest steel. It is a very strong reflector of light, and refracts incident rays more than any other substance except crocoite.l
Citation

APA: Gardner F. Williams  (1905)  Lake Superior Paper - The Genesis of the Diamond

MLA: Gardner F. Williams Lake Superior Paper - The Genesis of the Diamond. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1905.

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