We needed that. millions of men and women world wide are engaged in mining and most of that is artisanal. That means scant hardware and plenty of back work. Things like this pays for all of it and reminds us why mining is so much a business fueled on hope.
It appears that we are getting almost a flood of best stones coming out of all those mines brought up to standard during the past couple of decades.
.There was a time that De Beers thought they owned the business. That rudely ended with the advent of Canadian Exploration miners back almost thirty years ago and the resultant multiple discoveries by them. Now it is a true free for all.
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Good luck putting a ring on it
Vancouver company unearths 1,111-carat diamond
By Ian Bickis,
Thu, 19 Nov, 2015
The Canadian Press - An 1,111-carat diamond is shown in this undated handout photo. A Vancouver mining company says it has found one of the world's largest diamonds at its Karowe Mine in Botswana. THE CANADIAN …more
It's a discovery that would have made Elizabeth Taylor blush.
A Vancouver-based mining company says it has unearthed the second-largest gem quality diamond ever, and the largest discovered in over a century, at its Karowe Mine in Botswana.
Lucara Diamond Corp. (TSX:LUC) says it recovered a 1,111-carat diamond measuring 65 millimetres by 56 mm by 40 mm — a rock weighing half a pound that's nearly the size of a tennis ball.
Only the Cullinan diamond, weighing 3,106 carats — close to 1 1/2 pounds — and measuring over 10 centimetres in length, beats the diamond found by Lucara.
The Cullinan diamond, discovered in 1905 in South Africa, was eventually cut into smaller diamonds with the largest pieces incorporated into the British crown jewels.
Lucara says it's too early to say how much its diamond could be worth given its exceptional size, which it says is close to double that of any stone sold by a public company on record.
"So to put a value on the stone is really not possible," said company president and chief executive William Lamb said on a conference call Thursday.
Lamb said the company isn't in a rush to sell the gem, which it found Monday, and will be looking at ways of getting the best value from it. Lucara is still trying to analyze the stone, though it said it is a Type IIa diamond, meaning it is the purest type of diamond with no colour.
In July, Lucara did sell a 341.9-carat diamond of the same type for US$20.55 million. And in 2010, Petra Diamonds Ltd. sold a 507-carat white diamond for US$35.3 million.
Russell Shor, senior industry analyst at the Gemological Institute of America, says the stone could potentially be cut into the largest polished diamond in the world.
"There are a lot of really, really wealthy people around the world who would love to say they have the world's largest diamond ever cut," said Shor.
"Someone just paid US$48 million for a blue diamond last week. So the money is around to buy this for an extreme price."
Lucara also announced Thursday that it has recovered an 813-carat white diamond and a 374-carat white diamond from the Karowe mine this week.
"I am truly at a loss for words," Lamb said in a statement. "This has been an amazing week for Lucara with the recovery of the second largest and also the sixth largest gem quality diamonds ever mined."
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