diamondprospector.webs.comProspector's Guide to Diamonds

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Description:Several hundred diamond deposits have been found in North America. This site contains information on many new diamond...

Keywords:diamond, diamonds, kimberlite, lamproite, lamprophyre, State Line district, Iron Mountain district,...

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Diamonds are a Geologist’s Best Friend More Wyoming Diamonds Kimberlite DIAMONDS Diamond Prospecting Diamond Placers Photo Gallery In the News Contact Us Links Diamonds in Colorado, Kansas, Montana and Wyoming - the Wyoming Craton Previous Page Next Page Previous Play Slideshow Next Exploration of the Wyoming Craton began in 1975 following the accidental discovery of diamonds in a garnet harzburgite (peridotite) nodule collected from a Wyoming kimberlite. Since this discovery, the two largest kimberlite districts in the US and the largest lamproite field in the North American craton were recognized and later mapped by the author (W. Dan Hausel). Exploration of these regions resulted in more than 130,000 diamonds recovered by various companies that ranged from microdiamonds to 28.3 carats (including one broken octahedral fragment from a larger stone estimated by Howard Coopersmith to have been as much as 80 to 90 carats in weight). However, mills built in this region were so poorly designed that it was suggested that the facilities likely rejected more diamonds than they recovered. Of the 40 kimberlites mapped in the State Line district alone, all yielded diamonds, but the grade of the deposits remains unresolved. Just in 2006-07, Hausel found several prviously unknown kimberlites in this region along with more than 300 high-quality cryptovolcanic structures - many are likely kimberlites and a few represent two of the largest in the world. In addition to these structures, 300 kimberlitic indicator mineral anomalies were identified to the north in research study in the 1980s headed by Hausel. As incredible as it sounds, only a handful of these were ever explored. Within the State Line district, one geophysical firm identified a large group of EM and mag anomalies that are thought to be related to blind (hidden) diamond pipes. 14.2 carat octahedron from Kelsey Lake Colorado. Hundreds of other KIM anomalies were identified to the west in a region covering 250 square miles where diamondiferous lamprophyres were discovered. KIM anomalies & diamonds have also been identified in the Front Range, Laramie Range, Hartville uplift, Seminoe Mountains, Medicine Bow Mountains, Green River Basin, Powder River Basin, Sweetgrass Hills, Bighorn Mountains etc. Raw Wyoming diamond showing excellent trigons on surface of stone. In the Leucite Hills lamproite field and other localities, several diamond-stability indicator minerals were recovered and no follow-up work ever conducted (as of 2009). The Wyoming Craton, based on these discoveries, is a major (unexplored) kimberlite-lamproite-lamprophyre province. During the past 30 years, we have collected a very sizable data base on these anomalies. In addition to the kimberlites found in Colorado and Wyoming, other kimberlites, lamproites and lamprophyres were discovered in Montana and Kansas within the Wyoming Craton. Hausel (1998) also described kimberlites, lamproites, lamprophyres and other potentially diamondiferous rocks along with reported placer diamonds throughout portions of the US . Assortment of kimberlitic indicator minerals including purple pyrope, red, orange and pink pyrope garnets (Cape rubies), chromian diopside (Cape emeralds), picroilmenite and chromite. Below - two faceted Cape rubies from diamondiferous lamprophyres and anthills in the Cedar Mountain region, Green River Basin, southwestern, Wyoming. Create your own free website today Webs Better Websites Made Simple Create your own free website...

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