Diamonds are crystals made of carbon.
Diamond is the hardest and most valuable natural material.
Diamonds are used to make jewellery
Diamonds are used to cut, grind, and drill into other hard materials.
The formation of diamonds
The diamonds being mined today are hundreds of millions of years old. They formed long ago, deep inside the Earth and have been moved closer to the surface by volcanic eruptions.
Mining for diamonds
Some diamonds are mined in open pit mines.
The open pit can be kilometres long and a kilometre wide, and cover many hectares.
Soil and rock is removed so that rock containing diamonds can be collected.
Explosives are used to break open the rock. Tonnes of rock is taken by trucks to a crusher.
Many tonnes of rock has to be mined and crushed to get just one small diamond.
Diamonds are also mined underground.
Tunnels are dug deep into the earth and miners drill into the rock to get diamonds.
An interesting fact:
The cutting part of the drills used by diamond miners are made of diamond!
Diamond mining and the environment
Diamond mining can be harmful to the environment:
Air is polluted by dust from open pit mines.
The land is affected by the removal of soil and plants when mining takes place.
Dirt washes into rivers and streams from mine sites.
Miners might try to reduce the effects of mining on the environment but accidents happen and some mine operators don't take enough care to reduce the damaging effects of mining on people and the environment.
Diamond cutting
Once the diamonds are found they must be cut and polished so that they can be used to make jewellery. A diamond cutter cuts and polished the many sides (called facets) of a diamond. Diamonds are cut to make them reflect light, shine, and sparkle.
Did you know?
Diamonds were first mined in India over 2800 years ago.
The top diamond producing countries are Australia, Zaire, and Botswana.
Synthetic diamonds
Diamonds can be made in factories. Carbon is squeezed in machines at high temperature and pressure to make diamonds that are known as synthetic (say sin-thet-ic) diamonds.
Synthetic diamonds can't be used for jewellery. They are used in industrial tools to cut, grind and bore into other hard materials.
Watch a video about how diamonds are mined
Properties of diamonds
Lustrous (shiny) diamonds are used in jewellery because, when cut by an expert diamond cutter, they sparkle and reflect light in an attractive way. Diamond cutters use tools with diamond edges to cut other diamond.
Diamonds are the most popular gemstones.
Most diamonds are colourless and clear. They are ones we know best, but diamonds can be coloured also. Among the rarest and most valuable naturally coloured diamonds are pink Argyle diamonds from Western Australia.
Read about why Argyle diamonds are so precious:
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/article/how-do-diamonds-get-their-colours/
Diamond is the hardest of all materials and has a high melting point. These properties make diamond an excellent cutting tool. Drills like those used to drill through rocks in the oil exploration industry, are made with diamonds so that they stay sharp for longer. Diamond drills are used to cut bricks and concrete.
Insoluble in water. Diamond does not dissolve in water.
Does not conduct electricity. This means that electricity can't pass through diamond.
Find out more about diamonds and how they are formed here
https://beyond4cs.com/how-are-diamonds-made-and-formed/
Read about some of the most famous diamonds in the world:
https://www.1stdibs.com/blogs/the-study/most-famous-diamonds/