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A short history of diamond mines

   

The very mention of diamond evokes fantasies of fabulous riches and dreams of love and power. Up to the Middle Ages they were so rare and expensive that only royalty could afford diamonds. But in modern times even ordinary people are able to possess a few, thanks to the discovery of numerous diamond deposits elsewhere on the planet plus high, albeit controlled, production.

A short history of diamond mines
The Crater of Diamonds is an Arkansas State Park located in Murfreesboro in Pike County, Arkansas. It has the only diamond mine open to the public in the world. It is also the only diamond site where you can search and keep what you find.

Diamonds were discovered in India by the 4th century BCE. In addition to the diamond legends, India yielded many legendary diamonds, including the Koh-i-Noor, the Orlov, the Hope, and the Sancy. Today the Majhgawan pipe, a primary source near Panna, is the India's only producing diamond source.

"Herkimer Diamonds" is the name given to the doubly terminated quartz crystals found in Herkimer County, New York and surrounding areas.

At one time, India appears to have been the only source of this valuable gem until about the early eighteenth century when diamonds were discovered in Borneo and later elsewhere, such as in South Africa, Russia and Siberia. Although ancient Sanskrit texts mention several areas where diamonds were found, verifiable historical records are available for only a few deposits. Mining activities in southern India - which in its time was the leading producer of this gem and had yielded some of the most famous stones in history - gradually declined and had become defunct by the time diamonds were discovered elsewhere in the world.

A short history of diamond mines
Crater of Diamonds is the biggest diamond mine in the US. In Canada, Ekati is the largest and Diavik the second.
The Argyle mine, located in the Kimberley region in the far north east of Western Australia, is the world's largest largest diamond mine in the world, producing 34 million carats a year.

The 1867 discovery of diamonds in the Cape Colony, now a province in South Africa, changed forever the supply and marketing of diamonds. As annual world diamond production increased exponentially, a once extremely rare material became more accessible to Western society with its growing wealth, science learned that diamonds came from volcanoes, and everyone learned of Cecil John Rhodes, Barney Barnato, Kimberley, and De Beers. Today South Africa maintains its position as a major diamond producer.

Amsterdam was the major diamond cutting center in the nineteenth century, but due to Union pressure, it lost it dominant position and the leadership has been taken by Antwerp who still receive a large part of South African Gems.
If not for the controlled production and distribution of the South African diamond mines, diamonds could have been easily devalued and lost much the mystique they hold for us today.

 
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