On the Probable Existence of Microscopic Dia¬monds, with Zircons and Topaz, in the Sands of Hydraulic Washings in California

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
B. Prof. Silliman
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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3
File Size:
133 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1873

Abstract

THE occurrence of diamonds of some size in the gold-fields of California is by no means uncommon, and was noticed by me in a communication, to the California Academy of Science in 1867, when specimens of this gem, from at least five different localities, were exhibited. I then suggested that a more attentive examination of the heavy sands left in the sluices of hydraulic washings would in all probability detect diamonds, mingled with other rare species not commonly believed to have occurred in these sands. Mr. George A. Treadwell, of San Francisco, has lately sent me a small package of these sands, collected by him from the sluices of the "Spring Valley Gravel Mining Claim," Cherokee, Butte County, California. A microscopic examination shows these sands to abound in beautiful colorless zircons (hyacinths), of the form well known in the hyacinths of Expailly (France), associated with crystals of topaz, quartz in fragments, rounded grains 'of chromic and titanic iron, and
Citation

APA: B. Prof. Silliman  (1873)  On the Probable Existence of Microscopic Dia¬monds, with Zircons and Topaz, in the Sands of Hydraulic Washings in California

MLA: B. Prof. Silliman On the Probable Existence of Microscopic Dia¬monds, with Zircons and Topaz, in the Sands of Hydraulic Washings in California. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1873.

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