Monday, December 22, 2014

Re: [Geology2] Strange rock containing 30,000 diamonds baffles scientists



Dr Larry Taylor is my mentor to whom I owe a lot of my knowledge of: Geological, Meteorites and Life in General.  He is the world expert in Eclogite-derived diamonds which are mainly found in Russia.  Red and Green bearing rock: Eclogite, have diamonds are from retrograde metamorphosis of crustal materials which were sub-ducted then re-lifted  to the top of the crust and exposed through erosion. Other than this mine eclogite is only exposed at the surface in a few places Scandinavia and Northern California between the green and blue schisht zones  Their carbon source was surface/crustal carbon such as carbonate bearing rock such as limestone and I am sure some plant material.  So in this case, these diamonds really could be made from what was once coal!   Kimberlite diamonds are from about 140 miles deep and come from mantle carbon and contrary to the common myth aren't made from coal nor coal derived carbon--but it sure made a neat story line in the Superman tv series.  I believe while all 14 C is gone from both stocks there is an isotope ratio difference that distinguished eclogite and kimberlite derived diamonds.  The Russians he worked for gave him a  500,000+ super-tiny, industrial-diamond hourglass which is always a marvel to watch.  I caught on that he flips the hourglass when I show up at his office and our meeting is over when the diamonds run out into the bottom.  lol.  Smart man!

Eman


From: "Lin Kerns linkerns@gmail.com [geology2]" <geology2@yahoogroups.com>
To:
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2014 8:43 AM
Subject: [Geology2] Strange rock containing 30,000 diamonds baffles scientists

 

Strange rock containing 30,000 diamonds baffles scientists

Miners unearth rare rock stuffed full of diamonds that has baffled scientists

The rock that workers at Alrosa's Udachnaya diamond mine unearthed containing 30,000 diamonds
The rock that workers at Alrosa's Udachnaya diamond mine unearthed containing 30,000 diamonds Photo: Larry Taylor
By Andrew Trotman
19 Dec 2014
When Russian miners pulled a strange red and green stone out of the ground, they immediately knew it was different to the thousands of tons of ore they process every day.
In fact, what workers at Alrosa's Udachnaya diamond mine had unearthed was a 30mm rock that contained 30,000 diamonds - a conentration 1m times higher than normal.
However, despite the rare find the company donated the rock to the Russian Academy of Sciences, as the diamonds are so small that they cannot be used as gems.
After scanning the rock with X-rays, scientists found that the diamonds inside measure just 1mm and are octahedral in shape - similar to two pyramids stuck together at the base. The red and green colouring comes from larger crystals of garnet, olivine and pyroxene.
"The exciting thing for me is there are 30,000 itty-bitty, perfect octahedrons, and not one big diamond," said Larry Taylor, a geologist at the University of Tennessee, who presented the findings at the American Geophysical Union's annual meeting. "It's like they formed instantaneously. This rock is a strange one indeed."
Scientists are excited at the finding as they hope it will shed further light on how diamonds are made. They know diamonds are crystals of pure carbon that form under crushing pressures and intense heat, mostly formed in the Earth's mantle, the layer beneath the crust or surface layer, at a depth of about 150km. However, certain processes in their creation remain a mystery.
"The [chemical] reactions in which diamonds occur still remain an enigma," Mr Taylor told Live Science, which first reported the story.
Mr Taylor works with researchers at the Russian Academy of Sciences to study Udachnaya diamonds.
Russia is the largest diamond-producing country in the world, and produced more than 33m carats last year. State-controlled Alrosa is the world's leading diamond miner, accounting for 99pc of Russia's output and 27pc of global production. Its sees rough diamond revenues of more than $4bn a year.
Alrosa's share price over the past year
Last week Alrosa signed a dozen deals with Indian buyers to increase direct deliveries to Asia's third-largest economy. The firm earns half of its revenue, or around $2.5bn, from Indian-funded clients, and the deal could help Russia reduce risks linked to Western sanctions imposed over its role in the Ukraine crisis.
Last month Alrosa revealed a 10.5bn rouble (£110m) loss for its third quarter despite sales rising 7.6pc.
The Udachnaya mine, in the Sakha Republic, just outside the Arctic circle, is more than 600 metres deep, making it the third deepest open-pit mine in the world.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/industry/mining/11299776/Strange-rock-containing-30000-diamonds-baffles-scientists.html
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Posted by: MEM <mstreman53@yahoo.com>



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