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A scattering of
round-brilliant cut diamonds shows off the many
reflecting facets.
Diamond is one
of the two best known forms (or allotropes) of carbon, whose
hardness and high dispersion of light make it useful for industrial
applications and jewelry. (The other equally well known allotrope is
graphite.) Diamonds are specifically renowned as a mineral with
superlative physical qualities — they make excellent abrasives
because they can be scratched only by other diamonds,
ultrahard fullerite, or aggregated diamond
nanorods, which also means they hold a polish extremely well and
retain luster. About 130 million carats (26,000 kg) are mined
annually, with a total value of nearly USD $9 billion. About 100,000
kg are synthesized annually.
The name “diamond” derives
from the ancient Greek adamas (αδάμας; “invincible”). They
have been treasured as gemstones since their use as religious icons
in India at least 2,500 years ago—and usage in drill bits and
engraving tools also dates to early human history. Popularity of
diamonds has risen since the 19th century because of increased
supply, improved cutting and polishing techniques, growth in the
world economy, and innovative and successful advertising campaigns.
They are commonly judged by the “four Cs”: carat, clarity,
color, and cut. Although synthetic diamonds are
produced each year at nearly four times the rate of natural
diamonds, the vast majority of synthetic diamonds produced are small
imperfect diamonds suitable only for industrial-grade use.
Roughly 49% of diamonds
originate from central and southern Africa, although significant
sources of the mineral have been discovered in Canada, India,
Russia, Brazil, and Australia. They are generally mined from
volcanic pipes, which are deep in the Earth where the high pressure
and temperature enables the formation of the crystals. The mining
and distribution of natural diamonds are subjects of frequent
controversy—such as with concerns over the sale of conflict
diamonds by African paramilitary groups. There are also
allegations that the De Beers Group misuses its dominance in the
industry to control supply and manipulate price via monopolistic
practices, although in recent years the company's market share has
dropped to below 50%.
Material properties
The conventional
unit cell of the diamond crystal structure.
- Main article:
Material properties of diamond
- See also:
Crystallographic defects in diamond
A diamond is a
transparent crystal of pure carbon consisting of
tetrahedrally bonded carbon atoms. Humans
have been able to adapt diamonds for many uses because of the
material's exceptional physical characteristics. Most notable among
these properties are the extreme hardness of diamond, its high
dispersion index, and high thermal conductivity. These properties
form the basis for most modern applications of diamond.
Mechanical properties
Crystal structure
Diamonds typically
crystallize in the face-centered cubic crystal system and consist of
tetrahedrally bonded carbon atoms. The
unit cell of diamond has a two atom basis at (0,0,0) and
(1/4,1/4,1/4), which means half of the atoms are at lattice points
and the other half are offset by (1/4,1/4,1/4), where 1 is the
length of a side of the unit cell. The density of the diamond
crystal is 3.52 g/cm³.
The tetrahedral
arrangement of atoms in a diamond crystal is the source of many of
diamond’s properties. Graphite, another allotrope of carbon, has a
rhombohedral crystal structure and as a
result shows dramatically different physical characteristics —
contrary to diamond, graphite is a very soft, dark gray, opaque
mineral. Other elements of the carbon group such as silicon have
forms analogous to diamond.
Lonsdaleite is a polymorph of diamond (and
a distinct mineral species) that crystallizes with hexagonal
symmetry; it is rarely found in nature, but is characteristic of
synthetic diamonds. A cryptocrystalline variety of diamond is called
carbonado. A colorless, grey or black
diamond with a tiny radial structure is a
spherulite.
Hardness
The diamond crystal
bond structure gives the gem its hardness and
differentiates it from graphite.
Diamond is the hardest
known naturally occurring material, scoring 10 on the relative Mohs
scale of mineral hardness and having an absolute hardness value of
between 167 and 231
gigapascals in various tests. Diamond's
hardness has been known since antiquity, and is the source of its
name. However, aggregated diamond nanorods, an allotrope of carbon
first synthesized in 2005, are now believed to be even harder than
diamond.
The hardest diamonds in the
world are diamonds from the New England area in New South Wales,
Australia. These diamonds are generally small, perfect to
semiperfect octahedra, and are used to polish other diamonds. Their
hardness is considered to be a product of the crystal growth form,
which is single stage growth crystal. Most other diamonds show more
evidence of multiple growth stages, which produce inclusions, flaws
and defect planes in the crystal lattice all of which affect their
hardness (Taylor et al. 1990).
Industrial use of diamonds
has historically been associated with their hardness; this property
makes diamond the ideal material for cutting and grinding tools. It
is one of the most known and most useful of more than 3,000 known
minerals. As the hardest known naturally occurring material, diamond
can be used to polish, cut, or wear away any material, including
other diamonds. Common industrial adaptations of this ability
include diamond-tipped drill bits and saws, or use of diamond powder
as an abrasive. Other specialized applications also exist or are
being developed, including use as semiconductors: some blue diamonds
are natural semiconductors, in contrast to most other diamonds,
which are excellent electrical insulators. Industrial-grade diamonds
are either unsuitable for use as gems or synthetically produced,
which lowers their price and makes their use economically feasible.
Industrial applications, especially as drill bits and engraving
tools, also date to ancient times.
The hardness of diamonds
also contributes to its suitability as a gemstone. Because it can
only be scratched by other diamonds, it maintains its polish
extremely well, keeping its luster over long periods of time. Unlike
many other gems, it is well-suited to daily wear because of its
resistance to scratching—perhaps contributing to its popularity as
the preferred gem in an engagement ring or wedding ring, which are
often worn every day.
Toughness
Unlike hardness, which only
denotes resistance to scratching, diamond's toughness is only fair
to good. Toughness relates to a material's ability to resist
breakage from forceful impact. As with any material, the macroscopic
geometry of a diamond contributes to its resistance to breakage.
Diamond is therefore more fragile in some orientations than others.
Color
Diamonds occur in a variety
of translucent hues — colorless, steel, blue, yellow, orange, red,
green, pink, brown—or black. Diamonds with a detectable hue to them
are known as colored diamonds. If the color is strong enough,
a stone may be referred to as a fancy colored diamond by the
trade. Colored diamonds contain impurities or structural defects
that cause the coloration, while pure or nearly pure diamonds are
transparent and colorless. Most diamond impurities replace a carbon
atom in the crystal lattice. The most common impurity, nitrogen,
causes a slight to strong yellow coloration depending upon the type
and concentration of nitrogen present. The best color on a scale of
diamond color is D, while the least desirable is Z, which is yellow.
Thermodynamic stability
At surface air
pressure (one atmosphere), diamonds are not as stable as graphite,
and so the decay of diamond is thermodynamically favorable (ΔG = −2.99 kJ / mol).
Diamonds will burn at approximately 800 degrees Celsius, providing
that enough oxygen is available. This was shown in the late 18th
century, and previously described during Roman times. However, owing
to a very large kinetic energy barrier, diamonds are
metastable; under normal conditions, it
would take an extremely long time (possibly more than the age of the
Universe) for diamond to decay into graphite.
Electromagnetic properties
Diamonds exhibit
high dispersion of visible light.
Optical properties
Diamonds exhibit a high
dispersion of visible light. This strong ability to split white
light into its component colors is an important aspect of diamond's
attraction as a gemstone, giving it impressive prismatic action that
results in so-called fire in a well-cut stone. The luster of
a diamond, a characterization of how light interacts with the
surface of a crystal, is brilliant and is described as adamantine,
which simply means diamond-like. This is owed to their high
refractive index of 2.417 (at 589.3 nm), which causes total internal
reflection to occur. Some diamonds exhibit fluorescence of various
colors (predominately blue) under long wave ultraviolet light.
Nearly all diamonds fluoresce bluish-white, yellow or green under
X-rays and this property is used extensively in mining to separate
the fluorescing diamond from the non-fluorescing rock. Most diamonds
show no fluorescence although colored diamonds show a wider range of
fluorescence than the blue fluorescence normally observed in clear
diamonds.
Electrical properties
Except for most blue
diamonds, which are semiconductors, diamonds are good electrical
insulators. Blue diamonds owe their semiconductive property to boron
impurities, which act as a doping agent and cause p-type
semiconductor behavior. Blue diamonds which are not boron-doped,
such as those recently recovered from the Argyle diamond mine in
Australia that owe their color to an overabundance of hydrogen
atoms, are not semiconductors.
Thermal properties
Unlike most electrical
insulators, diamond is a good conductor of heat because of the
strong covalent bonding within the crystal. Most natural blue
diamonds contain boron atoms which replace carbon atoms in the
crystal matrix, and also have high thermal conductivity. Specially
purified synthetic diamond has the highest thermal conductivity
(2000–2500 W/(m·K), five times more than copper) of any known solid
at room temperature. Because diamond has such high thermal
conductance it is already used in semiconductor manufacture to
prevent silicon and other semiconducting materials from overheating.
The band gap of diamond is 5.4 - 6.4 eV.
Media
Diamond, Cubic-F
lattice, with a motif of C (0,0,0) and C (1/4,1/4,1/4).
Natural history
Formation
Diamonds are formed by
prolonged exposure of carbon bearing materials to high pressure and
temperature. On Earth, the formation of diamonds is possible because
there are regions deep within the Earth that are at a high enough
pressure and temperature that the formation of diamonds is
thermodynamically favorable. Under continental crust, diamonds form
starting at depths of about 150 kilometers (90 miles), where
pressure is roughly 5
gigapascals and the temperature is around
1200 degrees Celsius (2200 degrees Fahrenheit). Diamond formation
under oceanic crust takes place at greater depths because of higher
temperatures, which require higher pressure for diamond formation.
Long periods of exposure to these high pressures and temperatures
allow diamond crystals to grow larger.
The slightly
misshapen octahedral shape of this rough diamond crystal
in matrix is typical of the mineral. Its lustrous faces
also indicate that this crystal is from a primary
deposit.
Through studies of
carbon isotope ratios (similar to the methodology used in carbon
dating) except using the stable isotopes C-12 and C-13, it has been
shown that the carbon found in diamonds comes from both inorganic
and organic sources. Some diamonds, known as
harzburgitic, are formed from
inorganic carbon originally found deep in the Earth's mantle. In
contrast,
eclogitic diamonds contain organic
carbon from organic detritus that has been pushed down from the
surface of the Earth's crust through
subduction (see plate tectonics) before
transforming into diamond. These two different source carbons have
measurably different 13C:12C ratios. Diamonds
that have come to the Earth's surface are generally very old,
ranging from under 1 billion to 3.3 billion years old.
Diamonds occur most
often as
euhedral or rounded
octahedra and twinned octahedra known as
macles or maccles. As diamond's crystal structure has
a cubic arrangement of the atoms, they have many facets that belong
to a cube, octahedron,
rhombicosidodecahedron,
tetrakis n or disdyakis dodecahedron. The
crystals can have rounded off and unexpressive edges and can be
elongated. Sometimes they are found grown together or form double
"twinned" crystals grown together at the surfaces of the octahedron.
This is all due to the conditions in which they form. Diamonds
(especially those from secondary deposits) are commonly found coated
in nyf, an opaque gum-like skin.
Diamonds can also form
in other natural high-pressure, high-temperature events. Very small
diamonds, known as microdiamonds or nanodiamonds, have
been found in impact craters where meteors
strike the Earth and create shock zones of high pressure and
temperature where diamond formation can occur. Microdiamonds are now
used as one indicator of ancient meteorite impact sites.
Surfacing
Schematic diagram
of a volcanic pipe
Diamond-bearing rock
is forced close to the surface through deep-origin volcanic
eruptions. The magma for such a volcano must originate at a depth
where diamonds can be formed, 90 miles (150 km) deep or more (three
times or more the depth of source magma for most volcanoes); this is
a relatively rare occurrence. Below these typically small surface
volcanic craters are formations known as
volcanic pipes, which contain material
that was pushed toward the surface of the earth by volcanic action,
but did not erupt before the volcanic activity ceased.
Diamond-bearing volcanic pipes are most commonly found in the oldest
regions of continental crust, which relates to the fact that these
areas are the coolest portions of the earth's crust, and therefore
diamonds can form at the shallowest depths.
The magma in such
volcanic pipes is usually one of two characteristic types, which
cool into
igneous rock known as either opsidekimberlite or
lamproite. The magma itself does not
contain diamond; instead, it acts as an elevator that carries
deep-formed rocks and material upward. These rocks are
characteristically rich in
magnesium bearing
olivine,
pyroxene, and
amphibole minerals which are usually
altered to
serpentine under near surface conditions.
Certain indicator minerals typically occur within
diamondiferous kimberlites and are used as mineralogic tracers in
the search for diamond deposits by prospectors. These minerals are
rich in
chromium (Cr) or
titanium (Ti), elements which impart
bright colors to the minerals. The most common indicator minerals
are chromian garnets
(usually bright red Cr-pyrope,
and occasionally green
ugrandite-series garnets), eclogitic
garnets, orange Ti-pyrope, red high chromian spinels,
dark
chromite, bright green Cr-di,
glassy green
olivine, black
picroilmenite, and
magnetite. Kimberlite deposits are known
as blue ground for the deeper serpentinized part of the
deposits, or as yellow ground for the near surface
smectite clay
and carbonate
weathered and
oxidized portion.
Once diamonds have
been forced to the surface by magma in a volcanic pipe, they may
erode
out and be distributed over a large area. A volcanic pipe containing
diamonds is known as a primary source of diamonds.
Secondary sources of diamonds include all areas where a
significant number of diamonds, eroded out of their kimberlite or
lamproite matrix, accumulate because of water or weather action.
These include
alluvial deposits and deposits along
existing and ancient shorelines, where loose diamonds tend to
accumulate because of their approximate size and density. Diamonds
have also rarely been found in deposits left behind by
glaciers (notably in
Wisconsin and
Indiana); however, in contrast to alluvial
deposits, glacial deposits are not known to be of significant
concentration and are therefore not viable commercial sources of
diamond.
Diamonds can also be brought
to the surface through certain processes which may occur when two
continental plates collide forcefully, although this phenomenon is
less understood and currently assumed to be uncommon.
Gemological characteristics
The use of diamonds as
gemstones of decorative value is the most familiar use to most
people today, and is also the earliest use, with decorative use of
diamonds stretching back into antiquity. The dispersion of white
light into a rainbow of colors, known in the trade as fire,
is the other primary characteristic of gem diamonds, and has been
highly prized throughout history. Over time, especially since around
1900, experts in the field of
gemology have developed methods of
characterizing diamonds and other gemstones based on the
characteristics most important to their value as a gem. Four
characteristics, known informally as the four Cs, are now
commonly used as the basic descriptors of diamonds: these are
carat, clarity, color, and cut.
Most gem diamonds are traded
on the wholesale market based on single values for each of the four
Cs; for example knowing that a diamond is rated as 1.5 carats, VS2
clarity, F color, excellent cut, is enough to reasonably establish
an expected price range. More detailed information from within each
characteristic can then be used to determine actual market value for
individual stones. Consumers who purchase individual diamonds are
often advised to use the four Cs to pick the diamond that is "right"
for them; to these is sometimes added the "fifth C" of cost.
Other characteristics
not described by the four Cs can and do influence the value or
appearance of a gem diamond. These characteristics include physical
characteristics such as the presence of
fluorescence, as well as data on a
diamond's history including its source and which gemological
institute performed evaluation services on the diamond.
Cleanliness also dramatically affects a diamond's beauty.
There are four major
gemological associations which "certify" diamonds: that is, define
the four Cs of a diamond. While carat weight and cut angles are
mathematically defined, the clarity and color are judged by the
trained human eye and are therefore open to slight variance in
interpretation.
- Gemological Institute of America (GIA)
was the first laboratory to issue modern diamond reports, and
holds the highest reputation amongst gemologists for its
consistent, conservative grading.
- American Gemological Society (AGS) is
not as widely recognized nor as old as the GIA, but garners an
equally high reputation.
- International Gemological Laboratory
(IGL) is a generally respected laboratory but suffers from a
negative industry reputation for its grading practices, which
are perceived by critics as being either less conservative or
less consistent than the GIA and AGS.
- European Gemological Laboratory (EGL)
has a similar reputation to the IGL.
Carat
The
carat weight
measures the mass of a diamond. One carat is defined as exactly 200
milligrams (about 0.007 ounce).
The point unit—equal to one one-hundredth of a carat (0.01
carat, or 2 mg)—is commonly used for diamonds of less than one
carat. All else being equal, the value of a diamond increases
exponentially in relation to carat weight, since larger diamonds are
both rarer and more desirable for use as gemstones. A review of
comparable diamonds available for purchase in September 2005
demonstrates this effect (approximate prices for round cut, G color,
VS2 diamonds with "1A" cut grade, as listed on
http://www.pricescope.com):
The price per carat does not
increase smoothly with increasing size. Instead, there are sharp
jumps around milestone carat weights, as demand is much higher for
diamonds weighing just more than a milestone than for those weighing
just less. As an example, a 0.95 carat diamond may have a
significantly lower price per carat than a comparable 1.05 carat
diamond, because of differences in demand.
A weekly diamond price
list,
Rtheapaport Diamond Report
[1], is published by
Martin
Rapaport, CEO of Rapaport Group of
New York, for different diamond cuts, clarity and weights. It is
currently considered the
de-facto retail price baseline. Jewelers
often trade diamonds at negotiated discounts off the
Rapaport price (e.g., "R -3%").
In the wholesale trade of
gem diamonds, carat is often used in denominating lots of diamonds
for sale. For example, a buyer may place an order for 100 carats of
0.5 carat, D–F, VS2-SI1, excellent cut diamonds, indicating he
wishes to purchase 200 diamonds (100 carats total mass) of those
approximate characteristics. Because of this, diamond prices
(particularly among wholesalers and other industry professionals)
are often quoted per carat, rather than per stone.
Total carat weight
(t.c.w.) is a phrase used to describe the total mass of diamonds or
other gemstone in a piece of jewelry, when more than one gemstone is
used. Diamond solitaire earrings, for example, are usually quoted in
t.c.w. when placed for sale, indicating the mass of the diamonds in
both earrings and not each individual diamond. T.c.w. is also widely
used for diamond necklaces, bracelets and other similar jewelry
pieces.
Clarity
- Main article:
Diamond clarity
Clarity is a measure
of internal defects of a diamond called inclusions.
Inclusions may be crystals of a foreign material or another diamond
crystal, or structural imperfections such as tiny cracks that can
appear whitish or cloudy. The number, size, color, relative
location, orientation, and visibility of inclusions can all affect
the relative clarity of a diamond. The
Gemological Institute of America (GIA) and
others have developed systems to grade clarity, which are generally
based on those inclusions which are visible to a trained
professional when a diamond is viewed from above, under 10x
magnification.
Diamonds become increasingly
rare when considering higher clarity gradings. Only about 20 percent
of all diamonds mined have a clarity rating high enough for the
diamond to be considered appropriate for use as a gemstone; the
other 80 percent are relegated to industrial use. Of that top 20
percent, a significant portion contains a visible inclusion or
inclusions. Those that do not have a visible inclusion are known as
"eye-clean" and are preferred by most buyers, although visible
inclusions can sometimes be hidden under the setting in a piece of
jewelry.
Most inclusions present in
gem-quality diamonds do not affect the diamonds' performance or
structural integrity. However, large clouds can affect a diamond's
ability to transmit and scatter light. Large cracks close to or
breaking the surface may reduce a diamond's resistance to fracture.
Diamonds are graded by the
major societies on a scale ranging from Flawless to Imperfect. (see
the main article for more detail)
Color
- Main article:
Diamond color
diamonds in groups of similar colors.
A chemically pure and
structurally perfect diamond is perfectly transparent with no hue,
or color. However, in reality almost no gem-sized natural
diamonds are absolutely perfect. The color of a diamond may be
affected by chemical impurities and/or structural defects in the
crystal lattice. Depending on the hue and
intensity of a diamond's coloration, a diamond's color can either
detract from or enhance its value. For example, most white diamonds
are discounted in price as more yellow hue is detectable, while
intense pink or blue diamonds (such as the
Hope Diamond) can be dramatically more
valuable.
Most diamonds used as
gemstones are basically transparent with little tint, or white
diamonds. The most common impurity,
nitrogen, replaces a small proportion of
carbon atoms in a diamond's structure and causes a yellowish to
brownish tint. This effect is present in almost all white diamonds;
in only the rarest diamonds is the coloration due to this effect
undetectable. The GIA has developed a rating system for color in
white diamonds, from "D" to "Z" (with D being "colorless" and Z
having a bright yellow coloration), which has been widely adopted in
the industry and is universally recognized, superseding several
older systems once used in different countries. The system uses a
benchmark set of either natural diamonds of known color grade, or
precision-crafted cubic zirconia; test lighting conditions
are also standardized and carefully controlled. Diamonds with higher
color grades are rarer, in higher demand, and therefore more
expensive, than lower color grades. Oddly enough, diamonds graded Z
are also rare, and the bright yellow color is also highly valued.
Diamonds graded D-F are considered "colorless", G-J are considered
"near-colorless", K-M are "slightly colored". N-Y usually appear
light yellow or brown.
In contrast to yellow or
brown hues, diamonds of other colors are much rarer and more
valuable. While even a pale pink or blue hue may increase the value
of a diamond, more intense coloration is usually considered more
desirable and commands the highest prices. A variety of impurities
and structural imperfections cause different colors in diamonds,
including yellow, pink, blue, red, green, brown, and other hues.
Diamonds with unusual or intense coloration are sometimes labeled
"fancy" by the diamond industry. Intense yellow coloration is
considered one of the fancy colors, and is separate from the color
grades of white diamonds. Gemologists have developed rating systems
for fancy colored diamonds, but they are not in common use because
of the relative rarity of colored diamonds.
Cut
- Main article:
Diamond cut
Diamond cutting is the art and science of
creating a gem-quality diamond out of mined rough. The cut of
a diamond describes the manner in which a diamond has been shaped
and polished from its beginning form as a rough stone to its final
gem proportions. The cut of a diamond describes the quality of
workmanship and the angles to which a diamond is cut. Often diamond
cut is confused with "shape."
There are mathematical
guidelines for the angles and length ratios at which the diamond is
supposed to cut at in order to reflect the maximum amount of light.
Round brilliant diamonds, the most common, are guided by these
specific guidelines, though fancy cut stones are not able to be as
accurately guided by mathematical specifics.
The techniques for
cutting diamonds have been developed over hundreds of years, with
perhaps the greatest achievements made in 1919 by
mathematician and gem enthusiast
Marcel
Tolkowsky. He developed the
round brilliant cut by calculating the
ideal shape to return and scatter light when a diamond is viewed
from above. The modern round brilliant has 57 facets (polished
faces), counting 33 on the crown (the top half), and 24 on
the pavilion (the lower half). The girdle is the thin middle
part. The function of the crown is to diffuse light into various
colors and the pavilion's function to reflect light back through the
top of the diamond.
Tolkowsky defines the ideal
dimensions to have:
- Table percentage (table
diameter divided by overall diameter) = 53%
- Depth percentage
(Overall depth divided by the overall diameter) = 59.3%
- Pavilion Angle (Angle
between the girdle and the pavilion) = 40.75°
- Crown Angle (Angle
between the girdle and the crown) = 34.5°
- Pavilion Depth (Depth
of pavilion divided by overall diameter) = 43.1%
- Crown Depth (Depth of
crown divided by crown diameter) = 16.2%
The culet is the tiny point
or facet at the bottom of the diamond. This should be a negligible
diameter, otherwise light leaks out of the bottom. Tolkowsky's ideal
dimensions did not include a girdle. However, a thin girdle is
required in reality in order to prevent the diamond from easily
chipping in the setting. A normal girdle should be about 1%–2% of
the overall diameter.
The further the
diamond's characteristics are from Tolkowsky's ideal, the less light
will be reflected. However, there is a small range in which the
diamond can be considered "ideal." Today, because of the relative
importance of carat weight in society, many diamonds are often
intentionally cut poorly to increase carat weight. There is a
financial premium for a diamond that weighs the magical 1.0 carat,
so often the girdle is made thicker or the depth is increased.
Neither of these tactics make the diamond appear any bigger, and
they greatly reduce the sparkle of the diamond. So a poorly cut 1.0
carat diamond may have the same diameter and appear as large as a
0.85 carat diamond. The depth percentage is the overall quickest
indication of the quality of the cut of a round brilliant. "Ideal"
round brilliant diamonds should not have a depth percentage greater
than 62.5%. Another quick indication is the overall diameter.
Typically a round brilliant 1.0 carat diamond should have a diameter
of about 6.5 mm. Mathematically, the diameter in millimeters of a
round brilliant should approximately equal 6.5 times the
cube root of carat weight, or 11.1 times
the cube root of gram weight.
Shape
Diamonds do not show all of
their beauty as rough stones; instead, they must be cut and polished
to exhibit the characteristic fire and brilliance that diamond
gemstones are known for. Diamonds are cut into a variety of shapes
that are generally designed to accentuate these features.
Diamonds which are not
cut to the specifications of Tolkowsky's round brilliant shape (or
subsequent variations) are known as "fancy cuts." Popular fancy cuts
include the baguette (from the French, meaning rod or
loaf of bread), marquise,
princess (square outline), heart, briolette (a
form of the rose cut), and pear cuts. Generally speaking,
these "fancy cuts" are not held to the same strict standards as
Tolkowsky-derived round brilliants and there are less specific
mathematical guidelines of angles which determine a well-cut stone.
Cuts are influenced heavily by fashion: the baguette cut—which
accentuates a diamond's luster and downplays its fire—was all the
rage during the Art
Deco period, whereas the princess
cut—which accentuates a diamond's fire rather than its luster—is
currently gaining popularity. The princess cut is also popular
amongst diamond cutters: of all the cuts, it wastes the least of the
original crystal. The past decades have seen the development of new
diamond cuts, often based on a modification of an existing cut. Some
of these include extra facets. These newly developed cuts are viewed
by many as more of an attempt at brand differentiation by diamond
sellers, than actual improvements to the state of the art.
Quality
The quality of a diamond's
cut is widely considered the most important of the four Cs in
determining the beauty of a diamond; indeed, it is commonly
acknowledged that a well-cut diamond can appear to be of greater
carat weight, and have clarity and color appear to be of better
grade than they actually are. The skill with which a diamond is cut
determines its ability to reflect and refract light.
In addition to
carrying the most importance to a diamond's quality as a gemstone,
the cut is also the most difficult to quantitatively judge. A number
of factors, including proportion,
symmetry, and the relative angles of
various facets, are determined by the quality of the cut and can
affect the performance of a diamond. A poorly cut diamond with
facets cut only a few degrees out of alignment can result in a
poorly performing stone. For a round brilliant cut, there is a
balance between "brilliance" and "fire." When a diamond is cut for
too much "fire," it looks like a
cubic zirconia, which gives off much more
"fire" than real diamond. A well-executed round brilliant cut should
reflect light upwards and make the diamond appear white when viewed
from the top. An inferior cut will produce a stone that appears dark
at the center and in some extreme cases the ring settings may show
through the top of the diamond as shadows.
Several different
theories on the "ideal" proportions of a diamond have been and
continue to be advocated by professional gemologists. Recently,
there has been a shift away from grading cut by the use of various
angles and proportions toward measuring the performance of a cut
stone. A number of specially modified viewers and machines have been
developed toward this end. They included the FireScope, a.k.a.
SymmetriScope or IdealScope (tests for light leakage, light return
and proportions), Hearts and Arrows Viewer (test for "hearts
and arrows" characteristic pattern
observable on stones exhibiting high symmetry), GemEx
BrillianceScope (tests for direct light performance results of a
diamond),
Isee2 Beauty Evaluator (tests for diffused
light performance results of a diamond), and ASET (test for AGS cut
grade). These viewers and machines often help consumers determine
the light performance results of the diamond in addition to the
traditional 4 C's. Along with this shift there are a few companies
that provide results on these viewers and machines in addition to
the original 4c's. The GIA has also developed criteria for grading
the cut of round brilliant stones.
The cutting process
- Main article:
Diamond cutting
An uncut diamond
does not show its prized optical properties.
The process of shaping a
rough diamond into a polished gemstone is both an art and a science.
The choice of cut is often decided by the original shape of the
rough stone, location of the inclusions and flaws to be eliminated,
the preservation of the weight, popularity of certain shapes amongst
consumers and many other considerations. The round brilliant cut is
preferred when the crystal is an octahedron, as often two stones may
be cut from one such crystal. Oddly shaped crystals such as macles
are more likely to be cut in a fancy cut—that is, a cut other
than the round brilliant—which the particular crystal shape lends
itself to.
Even with modern techniques,
the cutting and polishing of a diamond crystal always results in a
dramatic loss of weight; rarely is it less than 50%. Sometimes the
cutters compromise and accept lesser proportions and symmetry in
order to avoid inclusions or to preserve the carat rating. Since the
per carat price of diamond shifts around key milestones (such as
1.00 carat), many one-carat diamonds are the result of compromising
"Cut" for "Carat." Some jewelry experts advise consumers to buy a
0.99 carat diamond for its better price or buy a 1.10 carat diamond
for its better cut, avoiding a 1.00 carat diamond which is more
likely to be a poorly cut stone.
Cleaning
- Main article:
Jewelry cleaning
Although it is not one of
the four Cs, cleanliness affects a diamond's beauty as much
as any of the four Cs. A clean diamond is more brilliant and fiery
than the same diamond when it is "dirty." Dirt or grease on the top
of a diamond reduces its luster. Water, dirt, or grease on the
bottom of a diamond interferes with the diamond's brilliance and
fire. Even a thin film absorbs some light that could have been
reflected to the person looking at the diamond. Colored dye or
smudges can affect the perceived color of a diamond. Historically,
some jewelers' stones were misgraded because of smudges on the
girdle, or dye on the culet. Current practice is to thoroughly clean
a diamond before grading its color.
Maintaining a clean
diamond can sometimes be difficult, as jewelry settings can obstruct
cleaning efforts, and oils, grease, and other
hydrophobic materials adhere well to a
diamond's surface. Some jewelers provide their customers with
ammonia-based cleaning kits;
ultrasonic cleaners are also popular.
Cleanliness does not
affect the diamond's market value, as any competent jeweler will
clean the diamond before offering it for sale. However, cleanliness
might reflect a diamond's sentimental value: some jewelers have
noted a correlation between ring cleanliness and marriage quality
[2].
History
Diamonds are thought
to have been first recognized and mined in
India,
where significant alluvial deposits of the stone could then be
found. The earliest written reference can be found in the
Sanskrit text
Arthasastra, which was completed
around 296 BCE and describes diamond's hardness, luster, and
dispersion. Diamonds quickly became associated with divinity, being
used to decorate religious
icons,
and were believed to bring good fortune to those who carried them.
Ownership was restricted among various
castes
by color, with only kings being allowed to own all colors of
diamond.
In February 2005, a
joint
Chinese-U.S.
team of
archaeologists reported the discovery of
four
corundum-rich stone ceremonial burial
axes
originating from China's
Liangzhu and
Sanxingcun cultures (4000 BCE–2500 BCE)
which, because of the axes' specular surfaces, the scientists
believe were polished using diamond powder
[3]
[4]. Although there are diamond deposits
now known to exist close to the burial sites, no direct evidence of
coeval diamond mining has been found: the researchers came to this
conclusion by polishing corundum using various
lapidary abrasives and modern techniques
then comparing the results using an
atomic force microscope. At that scale,
the surface of the modern diamond-polished corundum closely
resembled that of the axes; however, the polishes of the latter were
superior.
Diamonds were traded
to both the east and west of India and were recognized by various
cultures for their gemological or industrial uses. In his work
Naturalis Historia,
the
Roman writer
Pliny the Elder noted diamond's ornamental
uses, as well as its usefulness to
engravers because of its hardness. In
China, diamonds seem to have been used primarily for engraving
jade
and drilling holes in beads. Archaeological evidence from
Yemen
suggests that diamonds were used as drill tips as early as the 4th
century BCE. In
Europe,
however, diamonds disappeared for almost 1,000 years following the
rise of
Christianity because of two effects: early
Christians rejected diamonds because of
their earlier use in
amulets,
and
Arabic traders restricted the flow of
trade between Europe and India.
Diagram of
old diamond cuts showing the evolution from the most
primitive (point cut) to the most advanced pre-Tolkowsky
cut (old European).
Until the late
Middle Ages, diamonds were most prized in
their natural octahedral state, perhaps with the crystal surfaces
polished to increase luster and remove foreign material. Around
1300, the flow of diamonds into Europe
increased via
Venice's
trade network, with most flowing through the
low country ports of
Bruges,
Antwerp, and
Amsterdam. During this time, the
taboo
against cutting diamonds into gem shapes, which was established over
1,000 years earlier in the traditions of India, ended allowing the
development of diamond cutting technology to begin in earnest. By
1375, a guild of diamond polishers had been established at
Nuremberg. Over the following centuries,
various diamond cuts were introduced which increasingly demonstrated
the fire and brilliance that makes diamonds treasured today: the
table cut, the briolette (around 1476), the rose cut
(mid-16th century), and by the mid-17th century, the Mazarin,
the first
brilliant cut diamond design. In 1919,
Marcel Tolkowsky developed an ideal
round brilliant cut design that has set the standard for comparison
of modern gems; however, diamond cuts have continued to be refined.
The rise in popularity
of diamonds as gems seems to have paralleled increasing availability
through European history. In the 13th century, King
Louis IX of France established a law that
only the king could own diamonds. However, within a century diamonds
were popular gems among the moneyed
aristocratic and merchant classes, and by
at latest 1477 had begun to be used in
wedding rings. Popularity continued to
rise as new cuts were developed that enhanced the diamond's
aesthetic appeal, and has largely continued unabated to this day;
diamonds have proven popular with all classes in society as their
cost has become within reach. A number of large diamonds have become
historically significant objects, as their inclusion in various sets
of
crown jewels and the purchase, sale, and
sometimes theft of notable diamonds, have sometimes become
politicized.
Record-holding diamonds
The
Cullinan Diamond, part of the
British crown jewels, was the largest
gem-quality rough diamond ever found (1905), at 3,106.75 carats. One
of the diamonds cut from it, Cullinan I or the Great Star of Africa,
was formerly the largest gem-quality cut diamond at 530.2 carats,
but now that title has been taken by
the Golden Jubilee (1985), a 545.67 carat,
yellow-brown diamond. The largest flawless and colorless (grade D)
diamond is the
Centenary Diamond which weighs 273.85
carats. The
Millennium Star is the second largest
(1990) at 203.04 carats.
- See also:
List of famous diamonds
The diamond industry
The diamond industry can be
broadly separated into two basically distinct categories: one
dealing with gem-grade diamonds and another for industrial-grade
diamonds. While a large trade in both types of diamonds exists, the
two markets act in dramatically different ways.
Gem diamond industry
A large trade in
gem-grade
diamonds exists. Unlike
precious metals such as
gold
or
platinum, gem diamonds do not trade as a
commodity: there is a substantial mark-up
in the sale of diamonds, and there is not a very active market for
resale of diamonds. One hallmark of the trade in gem-quality
diamonds is its remarkable concentration: wholesale trade and
diamond cutting is limited to a few locations (most importantly New
York,
Antwerp,
London,
Tel
Aviv,
Amsterdam and
Surat),
and a single company—De
Beers—controls a significant proportion of
the trade in diamonds. They are based in
Johannesburg,
South Africa and
London,
England.
The production and
distribution of diamonds is largely consolidated in the hands of a
few key players, and concentrated in traditional diamond trading
centers (the most important being
Antwerp). The De Beers company holds a
clearly dominant position in the industry, and has done so since
soon after its founding in 1888. De Beers owns or controls a
significant portion of the world's rough diamond production
facilities (mines)
and distribution channels for gem-quality diamonds. The company and
its subsidiaries own mines that produce some 40 percent of annual
world diamond production. At one time it was thought over 80 percent
of the world's rough diamonds passed through the
Diamond Trading Company (DTC, a subsidiary
of
De
Beers) in
London,
but presently the figure is estimated at less than 50 percent. De
Beers used its
monopoly position to establish strict
price controls, and market diamonds directly to consumers in world
markets.
The
De Beers diamond advertising campaign is
acknowledged as one of the most successful and innovative ones in
history.
N.W. Ayer & Son, the advertising firm
retained by De Beers in the mid-20th century, succeeded in reviving
the American diamond market and opened up new markets, even in
countries where no diamond tradition had existed before. N.W. Ayer's
multifaceted marketing campaign included
product placement, advertising the diamond
itself rather than the De Beers brand, and building associations
with celebrities and royalty. This coordinated campaign has lasted
decades and continues today; it is perhaps best captured by the
now-familiar
slogan
"a diamond is forever".
Industrial diamond industry
The market for
industrial-grade diamonds operates much differently from its
gem-grade counterpart. Industrial diamonds are valued mostly for
their hardness and heat conductivity, making many of the gemological
characteristics of diamond, including clarity and color, mostly
irrelevant. This helps explain why 80% of mined diamonds (equal to
about 100 million carats or 20,000 kg annually), unsuitable for use
as gemstones and known as
bort,
are destined for industrial use. In addition to mined diamonds,
synthetic diamonds found industrial applications almost immediately
after their invention in the 1950s; another 400 million carats
(80,000 kg) of synthetic diamonds are produced annually for
industrial use—nearly four times the mass of natural diamonds mined
over the same period.
The dominant
industrial use of diamond is in cutting, drilling, grinding, and
polishing. Most uses of diamonds in these technologies do not
require large diamonds; in fact, most diamonds that are gem-quality
except for their small size, can find an industrial use. Diamonds
are embedded in drill tips or saw blades, or ground into a powder
for use in grinding and polishing applications. Specialized
applications include use in laboratories as containment for high
pressure experiments (see
diamond anvil), high-performance
bearings, and limited use in specialized
windows.
With the continuing
advances being made in the production of synthetic diamond, future
applications are beginning to become feasible. Garnering much
excitement is the possible use of diamond as a
semiconductor suitable to build
microchips from, or the use of diamond as
a
heat sink in
electronics. Significant research efforts
in
Japan,
Europe, and the
United States are under way to capitalize
on the potential offered by diamond's unique material properties,
combined with increased quality and quantity of supply starting to
become available from synthetic diamond manufacturers.
Diamond supply chain
See also:
List of diamond mines
The diamond supply
chain is controlled by a limited number of powerful businesses, and
is also highly concentrated in a small number of locations around
the world. In fact, the amount of power which De Beers has
consolidated historically prevented it from direct trade with the
United States, as its trade practices led
to an
indictment for violating
antitrust regulations (the case was
settled in 2004). The concentration of power only loosens at the
retail level, where diamonds are sold by a limited number of
distributors, known as
sightholders, to jewelers around the
world.
Alluvial
mining by traditional methods continues, as seen here in
Sierra Leone.
Sources
Historically diamonds
were known to be found only in alluvial deposits in
southern India; India led the world in
diamond production from the time of their discovery in approximately
the 9th century BCE to the mid-18th century CE, but the commercial
potential of these sources has been exhausted. The first non-Indian
diamond source was found in
Brazil
in 1725. Today, most commercially viable diamond deposits are in
Africa, notably in
South Africa,
Namibia,
Botswana, the
Democratic Republic of Congo,
Angola,
Tanzania and
Sierra Leone
[5]. There are also commercial deposits
being actively mined in the
Northwest Territories of
Canada,
Siberia (mostly in
Yakutia
territory, for example
Mir pipe and
Udachnaya pipe), Brazil, and in Northern
and Western
Australia. Diamond prospectors continue to
search the globe for diamond-bearing kimberlite and lamproite pipes.
In some of the more
politically unstable central African and west African countries,
revolutionary groups have taken control of diamond mines, using
proceeds from diamond sales to finance their operations. Diamonds
sold through this process are known as
conflict diamonds or blood diamonds.
In response to public concerns that their diamond purchases were
contributing to war and human rights abuses in central Africa and
west Africa, the diamond industry and diamond-trading nations
introduced the
Kimberley Process in 2002, which is aimed
at ensuring that conflict diamonds do not become intermixed with the
diamonds not controlled by such rebel groups. The Kimberley Process
provides documentation and certification of diamond exports from
producing countries to ensure that the proceeds of sale are not
being used to fund criminal or revolutionary activities. Although
the Kimberly Process has been somewhat successful in limiting the
number of conflict diamonds entering the market, conflict diamonds
smuggled to market continue to persist to some degree.
Currently, gem
production totals nearly 30 million carats (6,000 kg) of cut and
polished stones annually, and over 100 million carats (20,000 kg) of
mined diamonds are sold for industrial use each year, as are about
100,000 kg of synthesized diamond. In 2003, this constituted total
production of nearly US$9
billion in value.
Mining
Only a very small fraction
of the diamond ore consists of actual diamonds. The ore is crushed,
during which care has to be taken in order to prevent larger
diamonds from being destroyed in this process and subsequently the
particles are sorted by density. Nowadays, the diamonds are located
in the diamond-rich density fraction with the help of X-ray
fluorescence, after which the final sorting steps are done by hand.
Before the use of X-rays became commonplace, the separation was done
with grease belts; diamonds have a stronger tendency to stick to
grease than the other minerals in the ore.
Distribution
The
Diamond Trading Company, or DTC, is a
subsidiary of De Beers and markets rough diamonds produced both by
De Beers mines and other mines from which it purchases rough diamond
production. DTC performs sophisticated sorting of rough diamonds
into over 16,000 categories, and then sells bulk lots of rough
diamonds to a limited number of sightholders a few times a year.
Once purchased by
sightholders, diamonds are cut and polished in preparation for sale
as gemstones. The cutting and polishing of rough diamonds is a
specialized skill that is concentrated in a limited number of
locations worldwide. Traditional diamond cutting centers are
Antwerp,
Amsterdam,
Johannesburg,
New York, and
Tel
Aviv. Recently, diamond cutting centers
have been established in
China,
India, and
Thailand. Cutting centers with lower
costs of labor, notably
Surat
in Gujarat, India, handle a larger number of smaller carat diamonds,
while smaller quantities of larger or more valuable diamonds are
more likely to be handled in
Europe
or
North America. Demonstrating this, India
produces 90% of all cut and polished diamonds by number, but only
55% by value. The recent expansion of this industry in India,
employing low cost labor, has allowed smaller diamonds to be
prepared as gems than was previously economically feasible.
Diamonds which have
been prepared as gemstones are sold on diamond exchanges called
bourses. There are 24 registered diamond bourses. This is the
final tightly controlled step in the diamond supply chain;
wholesalers and even retailers are able to buy relatively small lots
of diamonds at the bourses, after which they are prepared for final
sale to the consumer. Diamonds can be sold already set in jewelry,
or as is increasingly popular, sold unset ("loose"). According to
the Rio Tinto Group, in 2002 the diamonds produced and released to
the market were valued at US$9 billion as rough diamonds, US$14
billion after being cut and polished, US$28 billion in wholesale
diamond
jewelry, and retail sales of US$57
billion.
[6]
One controversy about
the diamond industry is that buying diamonds
may support terrorism.
Synthetics, simulants, and
enhancements
- Main articles:
Synthetic diamond,
Diamond simulants and
Diamond enhancement
It is important to
distinguish that a
synthetic diamond is a true diamond
created by a technological process, whereas a
diamond simulant is defined as a
non-diamond material that is used to simulate the appearance of a
true diamond.
The gemological and
industrial uses of diamond have created a large demand for raw
stones. A portion of this demand is now being met by
synthetic diamonds, man-made diamonds
which have similar properties to natural diamonds. This process has
historically produced industrial-grade diamonds, but synthetic
diamond producers have recently begun to produce diamonds with high
enough quality to penetrate the gem diamond market. Diamonds have
been manufactured synthetically for over fifty years.
A diamond's gem
quality, which is not as dependent on material properties as
industrial applications, has invited both imitation and the
invention of procedures to enhance the gemological properties of
natural diamonds. Materials which have similar gemological
characteristics to diamond but are not real mined or synthetic
diamond are known as diamond simulants. The most familiar
diamond simulant to most consumers is
cubic zirconia (commonly abbreviated as
CZ); recently
moissanite has also gained cachet as a
popular diamond simulant. Both CZ and moissanite are synthetically
produced for use as a diamond simulant. Diamond enhancements are
specific treatments, performed on natural diamonds (usually those
already cut and polished into a gem), which are designed to better
the gemological characteristics of the stone in one or more ways.
These include laser drilling to remove inclusions, application of
sealants to fill cracks, treatments to improve a white diamond's
color grade, and treatments to give fancy color to a white diamond.
Currently, trained
gemologists with appropriate equipment are able to distinguish
natural diamonds from all synthetic and simulant diamonds, and
identify all enhanced natural diamonds. The established natural
diamond industry has a vested interest in maintaining the
distinction between natural diamonds and other diamonds, and has
made significant investments toward that end. However, as
manufacturing technology improves, synthetic diamonds may become
indistinguishable from natural diamonds, and new techniques for
creating and treating simulants (such as coating them with a very
thin diamond-like layer of carbon) are making it increasingly
difficult to distinguish simulants from real diamonds.
Symbolism
Mary of Burgundy is
the first known recipient of a diamond engagement ring,
in 1477.
Because of their
extraordinary physical properties, diamonds have been used
symbolically since near the time of their first discovery. Perhaps
the earliest symbolic use of diamonds was as the eyes of
Hindu devotional statues. The diamonds
themselves were thought to be endowments from the gods and were
therefore cherished. The point at which diamonds began to be
associated with divinity is not known, but early texts indicate that
it was recognized in
India
since at least 400 BCE. It is said the
Greeks believed diamonds were tears of the
gods; the
Romans believed they were splinters of
fallen stars. Many long dead cultures have sought to explain
diamond's superlative properties through divine or mystical
affiliations.
In
Tibetan Buddhism, also known as
Vajrayana (Diamond Vehicle), diamonds are
an important symbol, and the
Diamond Sutra is one of the most popular
texts.
In Western culture,
diamonds are the traditional emblem of fearlessness and virtue, but
have also often associated with power, wealth, crime and misfortune.
Today, diamonds are used to symbolize eternity and love, being often
seen adorning
engagement rings and sometimes
wedding rings as well. The popularity of
this modern tradition can be traced directly to the marketing
campaigns of De Beers, starting in 1938. Prior to the
De
Beers marketing campaign, engagement rings
had no one particular stone associated with them. The first diamond
engagement ring can be traced to the marriage of
Maximilian I (then Archduke of
Austria) to
Mary of Burgundy in 1477. Other early
examples of betrothal jewels incorporating diamonds include the
Bridal Crown of Blanche (ca. 1370–80) and the Heftlein
brooch of Vienna (ca. 1430–40), a pictorial piece depicting a
wedding couple. Inaccessibility of diamonds to the vast majority of
the population limited the popularity of diamonds as betrothal
jewels during this period.
The
LifeGem company further taps modern
symbolism by purporting to synthetically convert the carbonized
remains of people or pets into "memorial diamonds." However, many
people feel very uncomfortable at the thought of wearing the
carbonized remains of people as jewelry.
The diamond is the
birthstone for people born in the month of
April, and is also used as the symbol of a sixty-year
anniversary, such as a
Diamond Jubilee (see
hierarchy of precious substances).
Diamonds are a common
focus of fiction. Notable pieces of fiction include
Ian Fleming's
Diamonds Are Forever (1956),
Arthur C. Clarke's
2061: Odyssey Three (1988) and
Neal Stephenson's
The Diamond Age (1995). In addition,
diamonds are the subject of various myths and legends.
Symbolism in the Occult
According to occultist
myths, diamonds possess several
supernatural powers:
- A diamond gives victory
to he who carries it bound on his left arm, no matter the number
of enemies.
-
Panics,
Pestilences,
enchantments, all fly before it;
hence, it is good for
sleepwalkers and the
insane.
- It deprives
lodestone and
magnets of their virtue (i.e., ability
to attract iron).
- Arabic diamonds
are said to attract iron greater than a
magnet.
- A diamond's
hardiness can only be broken by smearing it with fresh
goat's
blood.
External links
References
- American
Museum of Natural History.
"The Nature of Diamonds".
Retrieved March 9, 2005.
- Anderson,
Arthur & Judith.
"Fancy Color Diamonds". Retrieved
September 12, 2005.
- The Columbia
Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition (2003). "Diamond".
Retrieved March 9, 2005 at
http://www.answers.com/topic/diamond.
- Cuellar,
Fred.
"Diamonds - Getting Into Shape".
Diamond Cutters International. Retrieved April 10, 2005.
- David, Joshua
(September 2003).
"The New Diamond Age". Wired,
issue 11.09.
- De Beers
Group.
"De Beers Group". Retrieved March
14, 2005.
- Epstein,
Edward Jay (February 1982).
"Have You Ever Tried To Sell a Diamond?"
(subscription required). The Atlantic Monthly.
- Epstein,
Edward Jay (1982).
"THE DIAMOND INVENTION" (Complete
book, includes "Chapter 20: Have you ever tried to sell a
diamond?")
- Eppler, W.F.
Praktische Gemmologie. Rühle-Diebner-Verlag, 1989
- Government of
Gujarat (2004).
"Vibrant Gujarat: Sector Profiles".
Retrieved March 14, 2005.
- Kjarsgaard, B.A.
and Levinson, A. A. (2002). Diamonds in Canada. Gems &
Gemology, Vol. 38, No. 3, pp. 208–238.
- Pagel -
Theisen, Verena. Diamond Grading ABC: the Manual.
Rubin & Son, Antwerp, Belgium, 2001.
ISBN 3980043460
- Pricescope.
"Diamond price report". Retrieved
September 26, 2005.
- Sque, Steve
(March 8, 2005).
"Properties of Diamond". Retrieved
March 10, 2005.
- Taylor, W.R.,
Lynton A.J. & Ridd, M., (1990) Nitrogen defect aggregation
of some Australasian diamonds: Time-temperature constraints
on the source regions of pipe and alluvial diamonds.
American Mineralogist, 75, pp. 1290-1310.
- Tolkowsky,
Marcel (1919). Diamond Design: A Study of the Reflection
and Refraction of Light in a Diamond. London: E. & F.N.
Spon, Ltd. (Web
edition as edited by Jasper
Paulsen, Seattle, 2001.)
- Tyson, Peter
(November 2000).
"Diamonds in the Sky". Retrieved
March 10, 2005.
- United
Nations Department of Public Information (March 21, 2001).
"Conflict Diamonds". Retrieved
March 10, 2005.
- Weiner, K.L.,
Hochleitner, R., Weiss, S., Voelstadt H. Diamant,
Lapis, München, 1994.
- Yarnell,
Amanda (February 2, 2004).
"The Many Facets of Man-Made Diamonds".
Chemical & Engineering News, vol. 82, no. 5, pp
26–31.
- American
Museum of Natural History.
"The Nature of Diamonds".
Retrieved Oct 21,2005.
-
Supercomputing Institute."Simulation
of diamond growth".Retrieved Nov
01,2005.
- Carnegie
Institution."Very
Large Diamonds Produced Very Fast".Retrieved
Nov 01,2005.
- Spence, Lewis. "An
Encyclopaedia of Occultism". Published by University Books,
Inc., 1960.