How to mine gems yourself. Precious stones: classification, names and photos. Primitive mining methods

In addition to the famous tea plantations, Sri Lanka is also famous for its precious stones. It occupies a leading position in the extraction of precious stones. The process of mining stones has remained unchanged since ancient times. It's still handmade. Mines are dug with a pick and shovel, usually close to the river bank. The rock itself is lifted up in baskets or buckets with ropes, and then washed under running water or in the nearest river. Then special people get to work, trying to find a gem in a handful of stones. Sometimes you can find one, two or even a whole handful of stones, but often the seekers are left empty-handed. And the whole process starts all over again. Almost all gems, especially large ones, are sold at auction. During the time of the Arab merchants, the island was called Serendip or the island of precious stones. Under the name "Serendip", Sri Lanka entered the stories about Sinbad the Sailor, who visited Sri Lanka twice, and the legends of 1000 and 1 nights. The famous traveler Marco Polo saw a ruby ​​as thick as a human hand that adorned Ruvanveli Dagoba in Anuradhapura. The famous blue sapphire "Blue Beauty" of 400 carats, adorning the English crown, as well as the "Star of India" sapphire of 536 carats, exhibited in the New York Museum, originally from Sri Lanka, namely from the city of Ratnapura, which has been important for centuries center for the extraction of precious stones. 01. Mining is carried out only manually. Of the automation equipment, only pumps that constantly pump out water. Digging right in the rice fields. If you turn off the pump, the mine will flood in about an hour. If the mine is deep, then air is forced into the adits, by a motor pump.
02. Previously, excavators and other heavy equipment were used for mining, but after them there were lakes.
03. In Sri Lanka, about 90% of the land contains almost half of the 200 varieties of precious and semi-precious stones that exist in the world.
04. To mine stones, you need a license, it costs $5,000 a year.
05. In such wicker baskets, soil is passed upstairs, where it is washed in search of precious stones.
06.
07. More serious development from several mines. The depth of the mine is from 7 to 30 meters.
08.
09. Development here was stopped a few months ago, the mine is abandoned.
10.
11. All raised clay is washed.
12.
13. After 10 minutes, only small pebbles remain in a special basket.
14. Among them, precious sapphires, rubies, alexandrites, etc. are found. Sometimes you can dig for 2-3 months and not find a single stone.
15.
16. Here are some semi-precious stones. After the end of the shift, they are handed over to the market. Until you start processing a stone, it is not clear how valuable it is, so no one will give much for an unprocessed stone. But if the stone turns out to be clean, without impurities, it can be very expensive, but the one who got it will not know about it. In order not to lose money in the event of such luck, many miners work with families, some mine, others process.
17.
18. A real Marlboro kauba.
19.
20. 21.
22. After processing, the stones go to the store.
23.
24. Store them in envelopes. Only a professional can understand where a real valuable stone is. Sapphires, for example, are heated to give them the desired color. Real pure sapphire does not need heat treatment and is very expensive. The price of one carat reaches 10,000 dollars.
25. Handbag for expensive stones.
26. There are grenades in Sri Lanka various kinds: essonite (orange brown), almandine (fiery red), rhodolite (pale red), spesartite (brown red), and yellowish red garnet. You can also find here greenish-yellow Alexandrite, Cat's eye, Moonstone (light, translucent, with bluish reflections), Amethyst, Aquamarine, Beryl, Topaz (usually yellow-brown), Zircon, Tourmaline Chrysoberyl (golden yellow or greenish color) , and Spinel.
27. Sapphires, average $300 per carat.
28.
Original taken from

It is known that, before decorating jewelry, precious stones go quite a long way. First, they are extracted from the earth's crust, where they have been formed for a long time, and then they are subjected to a special treatment, as a result of which the gems acquire a neat and attractive appearance. However, few people know exactly where certain gems are mined, and in what ways they are processed. Especially popular, today, are such stones as sapphire, topaz, amethyst, emerald and ruby. It is about them that will be discussed in this article.

Sapphire - it is a transparent variety of corundum, painted in saturated Blue colour. The oldest deposit where sapphires were first discovered is on the island of Sri Lanka. Now these wonderful minerals are mined in Thailand, Australia, Burma, Brazil, Vietnam and Africa.

After mining, the stones are sent for processing, where in the skillful hands of the cutter they turn into real precious masterpieces. The most common procedure for processing sapphires is to heat them. Moreover, it can mean both a simple placement of a mineral in a fire, and the use of special gas equipment and presses. All this allows you to improve the color and transparency of the gemstone, which will retain its beauty for many years.

One of the most beautiful gems is topaz . It is valued for its hardness and various colors. Yellow, blue and pink topaz are especially popular.

The main deposits of topaz are in Brazil. In addition to this country, precious stones are mined in India, Japan, Burma, Madagascar, Mexico, the USA, Namibia, Ukraine (Volodarsko-Volynskoye deposit) and Russia (Transbaikalia, Urals). When processing topaz, as a rule, facet cutting and cabochon cutting, as well as jewelry carving along the edges, are used. Also, sometimes a special surface coating is applied to topaz, thanks to which you can get various very interesting shades.

Amethyst - one of the most valuable varieties of quartz, painted in purple. The deposits of this precious stones are associated with hydrothermal formations and placers, as well as pegmatites. They are found in almost every country in the world. Particularly beautiful amethysts are mined in Brazil, Russia (in the Urals), India, Bolivia, Uruguay, Canada, the USA and Burma.

As for the processing of this stone, it is carried out different ways. A feature of amethyst is that the stone is colored unevenly and usually its color intensifies closer to the top. This must be taken into account when carrying out the procedure for cutting a gemstone. The most common cut is oval or round shape as well as cabochon. More unusual cuts are used for amethysts with good color distribution.

No less beautiful gem is emerald . This velvety green variety of beryl is quite widely used in jewelry. Emeralds are mined in Colombia (departments of Cundinamarca, Muso and Baiaca), in South Africa (Transvaal), in Africa and in Russia (Urals). The highest quality stones are mined in Colombia. This country accounts for 90% of the world's production of these gems.

Emeralds are processed using a specially designed emerald cut. As a result, the stone acquires a square or rectangular shape with blunt corners. Such a cut not only improves the already beautiful green color emerald, but also makes the stone more resistant to various mechanical damage. The so-called emerald pearls or cabochons are most often made from crystals with cracks and inclusions.

Ruby - A variety of red corundum. In nature, this gem

is quite rare. Its deposits are located in Burma (Mong-Shu, Mogok and Namya), Tanzania (Arusha), India (Kashmir), Afghanistan, Colombia, Vietnam, USA, Pakistan, Thailand, and also in Madagascar (Watomandri and Adilamenia). After mining, the stones are sent to Thailand for processing. The most expensive stones are cut in Israel or in Europe.

Processing rubies is carried out using a method common today, which consists in filling all the voids in the stone with glass mass. It is known that almost all rubies have voids, gas bubbles, various mineral inclusions and caverns in their structure, which sometimes occupy from 30 to 70% of the total volume of the gemstone. With the help of heat treatment, it is possible to partially remove the mineral inclusions present in the liquid contained in the ruby. This process is called "natural healing". After that, the procedure of "artificial healing" is carried out, when a special glass mass is launched into the stone, which removes all remaining inclusions through the pores and cracks in the surface and finally seals them.

diamondland,

At all times, precious stones, due to their rarity, retained their attractiveness for humans. In ancient times, magical, mystical power was attributed to them, and they attract us with their beauty, with the joy that the unusual transparency of crystals and the magnificence of their colors give us. Many gemstones are formed in the depths of rocks in the process of primary crystallization (for example, diamonds) or filling cracks in newly formed rocks (for example, beryls and topazes). Opals belong to the sedimentary type of rocks.

Deposits of precious stones are often secondary, formed due to the weathering of rocks. Due to the processes of weathering of primary (primary) deposits, precious stones - more stable than rock-forming minerals - accumulate in loose deposits of rivers and the coastal strip of oceans and seas - in the so-called placers, from where they can be relatively mined by washing. In primary bedrock, stones must be artificially separated from the host rock. Since their density is generally higher than the density of quartz and other rocks, they are deposited and concentrated in certain layers. Since antiquity, the unit of mass of precious stones has been the carat. Currently, carat weight is standardized worldwide, and 1 metric carat is 200 mg. The mass of less valuable jewelry and ornamental stones - for example, such as minerals of the quartz group - is measured in grams, ornamental jasper - in kilograms.

Precious and ornamental stones are found in many parts of the world, sometimes in the form of individual finds, sometimes in larger quantities. Accumulations of precious stones suitable for mining are called deposits, and the places where single finds were made are called manifestations or points of mineralization. According to the origin of parent rocks, igneous (having a magmatic source), sedimentary (formed in the process of sedimentation) and metamorphogenic (arising by the transformation of other rocks) deposits of stones are distinguished.

Often, especially from a practical point of view, it is more appropriate to subdivide deposits and manifestations of precious stones into primary (occurring in the place of their formation) and secondary (redeposited elsewhere). In primary deposits(primary deposits) gems retain their original connection with the parent rock. Their crystals are well preserved. The productivity of such deposits, however, is not very high: during their development, a lot of waste rock has to be removed, which sharply increases the cost of production. So today, diamonds are mined from bedrock kimberlite pipes - with the loss of cement, clay, terracotta.

In the process of formation secondary deposits gemstones are transported from their place of origin to another place where they are deposited again. Hard and durable crystals are then rolled, less durable ones are crushed into pieces or even completely abraded. According to the method of transportation and material transfer agents, river (alluvial), marine and eolian (wind) deposits are distinguished.

Rivers are capable of transporting rock containing precious stones for hundreds of kilometers. When the flow of the water stream - and thus the carrying force - is weakened, the gems, which have a relatively high density, are deposited first, ahead of the lighter quartz sand, due to which rich accumulations of gems are formed in places. As a result, the development of secondary deposits is much easier and more productive than primary ones. In the photo of the middle of the 20th century - washing of diamonds in basins (prospecting work in Angola).

Accumulations of precious stones washed with water are called placers (they talk about diamond placers, placers of other precious stones) or alluvial deposits. In a similar way, placers of precious stones can be formed in the wave-cut zone along the sea coast. In Namibia, diamonds are very successfully mined from such deposits. And even the wind is able to move small precious stones; such "eolian" sorting of sediments leads to the formation of their accumulations in favorable areas.

An intermediate position between primary and secondary deposits is genetically occupied by weathering deposits, or eluvial deposits. Placers are formed at the foot of steep cliffs and high mountains. Precious stones accumulate in such areas in small gravel of weathered rocks, the lighter components of which are carried away by rain or snow water and wind, while gems remain in place and can be rolled into silt, clay, cement, kimberlite.


The most dangerous hallucinations on kimberlites and color distortion perception colors precious stones
Example - blue "Atomic tornado", brain death (left) and finishing palette of nerves, electric shocks (right)
GOK is colorographically modeled - sinking of the upper level of kimberlite, stalactite harvester (color model)
A complete palette range - an imitation of the biological perception of a person, modern. 32-bit PC, author's algorithms
palettes of biological perception different colors human senses (author, 2014)

Specificity and problems of Ukraine

In Ukraine and the CIS, the extraction of precious and jewelry and semi-precious stones is carried out both by specialized mining and processing plants and by small enterprises; quite often, mining is combined with geological exploration and is carried out directly by exploration parties. At some deposits, the labor of prospectors is still used, paid according to the final result. In a number of cases, precious stones are mined along the way during the development of deposits of other types of mineral raw materials.

The main task in Ukraine today should be the impossibility of illegal export of, leakage and illegal receipt of especially valuable stones from the domestic market of Ukraine to the world market - this applies primarily to both Ukrainian amber (burshtine), beryls (heliodors) and topazes, as well as valuable stones and rare mineralogical samples (sapifers, rubies) brought to Ukraine , topaz, emeralds, diamonds, etc.). The issue is within the competence of customs, law enforcement agencies and state security agencies. Collecting rare samples of minerals and especially valuable stones by citizens within the country should be encouraged by the state, as this contributes to the well-being of citizens and the nation as a whole - and hence the enrichment of the Ukrainian state. A careful attitude to natural resources, many of which are irreplaceable, should be encouraged, the secondary development of dumps, the suppression of the “black” mining of stones and rocks (agates, burshtin, sand, etc.) destructive for nature, the provision of real associated extraction of valuable samples and minerals from own and imported raw materials.

An equally important problem for Ukraine is the selection, revision and preliminary processing of mineral raw materials supplied to factories and enterprises for processing, in order to identify samples that are especially valuable from a mineralogical point of view. For example, fluorite is delivered to Ukraine by carloads from Mongolia for the needs of the steel-smelting industry. Fluorite wagons are carefully guarded and dumped into smelting furnaces without prior inspection. Rare valuable samples of jewelry and ornamental fluorite, which occasionally come across in a common fluorite mass, also get into the melt. Their volume is small enough to affect the smelting process, so the removal of valuable fluorite cannot cause economic harm to the enterprise. But the remelting of this jewelry fluorite makes our state poorer, and steel worse. Such a phenomenon is absolutely unacceptable, since the value of the samples is high. In Asia, jewelry fluorite is used to make beads, jewelry and crafts, balls and eggs, sold by the gram, jewelry fluorite raw materials are sold by the kilogram, and industrial fluorite by the ton.

No less ugly is the disregard for their own natural resources. In the Krivoy Rog basin, during the extraction of iron ore, such valuable minerals as rock crystal, jaspillite (red-striped quartzite), gem-quality citrine, unique samples of the Ukrainian tiger's eye and even the rarest gray-golden quartz cat's eye, sprouted with asbestos fibers can be sent for processing and smelting . In the melting furnace, all this turns into slag and does not at all contribute to improving the quality of melting.

When extracting hard coal, such a valuable mineral as jet is not really developed - and it's good if the jet goes to dumps with its subsequent extraction by hand, and not into the furnace. The state must practically regulate and ensure solution of ASSOCIATED production issues from own deposits and imported foreign raw materials of valuable mineralogical samples for their subsequent separate processing.

An example of the successful solution of associated mining issues is the extraction of rare fossils during the extraction and processing of limestone and other sedimentary rocks. Since all rocks are actually examined, especially rare and valuable fossils can be noticed in time and removed from the total mass of the rock. Rare fossils are valued far above the surrounding rocks. When unique and especially large specimens are identified, paleontologists are invited. That is, the main thing in this case is the so-called "human factor" - enthusiasts and professionals. An example of the predatory disposal of valuable resources is the extraction of limestone abounding in fossils in the south of France, where valuable rocks are sold not only in slabs and blocks, but literally whole rocks.

Potentially valuable mineralogical rocks should be previewed. In the case of identifying single finds that are not of value to the state, this will allow the preservation and use of rare and valuable mineralogical species. It is not economically feasible to pursue small single finds. Unique finds should be adequately rewarded on the one hand, and criminally prosecuted in the event of an attempt to destroy or export abroad on the other hand. Massive incidental production can be legally paid for as artisanal labor - according to the final result. There are enthusiasts and professionals in Ukraine who are ready to legally engage in this type of activity (including seasonally), which will allow bringing "black" and "underground" geology "out of the shadows", legalizing it, supporting folk craftsmen of Ukraine, preserving and increasing valuable mineralogical resources of our country.

Mining methods

Deposits of precious stones are unevenly distributed on the globe. Some regions, such as South Africa, South and Southeast Asia, Brazil, the Urals, Transbaikalia, Australia and the mountain belts of the USA are especially rich in them. But the main world production of precious stones today is carried out in the so-called POOR countries (they steal a lot). Stones are bought up practically for next to nothing, and most often they simply steal away - with fights and massacres, after which they go to the "black" jewelry markets of the world without chemical analysis, dosimeter and examination at excessively inflated prices. This leads to an uneven distribution of profits from the final sale of precious stones in a number of rich countries of the world and a very high price for them, supported completely artificially. The exception today is the expensive mining of diamonds from bedrock, which requires high costs and modern technologies(often - chemical reconnaissance and modern dosimetry). These are modern kimberlite technologies of three levels of danger.

The photo shows not only the work with ledges for the complex extraction of kimberlite, but also three levels of danger to which a person exposes himself. Upper - red level (heavy earth and clay, terracotta). Average level - white color, potash (explodes if it is abundantly moistened), and the lower level is the outlet of radioactive kimberlite karst waters. Therefore, such a development advances a person to three levels of danger - mechanical injuries (upper red level), chemical poisoning (white potassium layer) and radiation damage (blue level - radioactive uranium and diamonds). Production rates are limited (unless, of course, you are slaves of the Spanish crown).

Many deposits of precious stones were discovered by accident (the owners stumbled). Even today, systematic searches in most areas are limited mainly to diamonds alone. As for other precious stones, the search for their deposits is usually carried out by the simplest means, without the use of modern technology and in the absence of an appropriate scientific base. Nevertheless, it is still worthy of surprise with what success local search engines are identifying more and more new deposits. Mining enterprises for the exploitation of deposits of precious stones are called mines, mines or mines.

The methods of extracting precious stones, with the exception of diamonds, are very primitive in most countries; in some areas they are essentially the same as at the dawn of our era and earlier. The easiest way is to collect precious stones located directly on the surface (including kimberlite - with the preservation of the mine for 10-12 years). This is possible in a dry river valley or in rock crevices. Crystals that have grown on the rock are broken off with a hammer and chisel, a pickaxe or crowbar, as well as with pneumatic jackhammers or in an explosive way. Consult with the owners - they are responsible for this criminally.

It is relatively easy to extract precious stones from young placers. First of all, the overburden deposits are removed. If the placers lie deep from the surface, then there are pits and mines, sometimes up to 10 or more meters deep. Simple ceilings protect the mouth of the mine from rain, groundwater seeping from below is scooped out with buckets or pumped out with mechanical pumps. From the bottom of the mine, horizontal underground workings run along a layer of sands bearing precious stones. In the largest production shafts, temporary fastening is installed.

Sometimes precious stones are mined even directly from the riverbed (not before the tsunami - killer waves). To do this, the river is artificially dammed in some places so that its waters flow faster. Workers, standing waist-deep in such water, stir up the bottom soil with long poles and rakes. Clay-sandy soil components, which have a lower density, are carried away with the flow of water, while heavier gems remain on the bottom.

Further enrichment of sands extracted from mines or from a river with precious stones is carried out by washing them. Workers fill loose rock containing precious stones into special baskets and shake them in washing pits filled with water. In the process, clay and sand are carried away, while the heavier gemstones accumulate in the concentrate. Light stones, like beryls, feldspars, quartz and tourmalines, are, of course, lost with this method of extraction - they are extracted from primary deposits, ground and underground placers.

In some countries, hydraulic methods of placer mining are practiced, when loose detrital material is washed off slopes with strong water jets. There is also open pit mining. Underground mining requires the greatest expenditures, in which adits pass through solid rock. It is resorted to only in those places where the presence of a vein with precious stones is firmly established.


Finsh diamond mine, developed by terraces, and processing plants (South Africa).


High-cost diamond mining off the Namibian coast.

Regarding the rights to explore and extract precious stones, the payment of workers in each country has its own rules. On the whole, it can be said that in most countries of the world, work in the extraction of precious stones and mines is the fate of slaves (dangerous). The exceptions are economically and industrially more developed countries, but they have the problem of "black geology" and "black export", which are engaged in by both poor and rich people.

A particular problem in the extraction of precious stones is theft. They are dangerous for the mining company, primarily because they bring down the price of stones to more low level depriving super profits of monopolies and jewelry lobbies and causing harm to the state. The inventiveness of thieves in methods and techniques of stealing precious stones from mines and mines seems inexhaustible. But measures to combat theft are becoming more sophisticated, dangerous (including for others) and far from always moral and legal. In Ukraine, this is how amber is guarded in sandy placers near the Dnieper. Diamond mines are the most securely protected in the world.

Only very few gemstones are completely "clean", that is, completely devoid of optically (under a 10x magnifying glass) recognizable internal inclusions. Stones such as rubies and emeralds are extremely rarely defect-free, without cracks and inclusions. A particularly important role is played by the so-called purity for diamonds. Their best grades should show no flaws, even under a 10x loupe.

Back in the middle of the 20th century, any violations of the correct structure of the crystal were called defects. But, since they do not always reduce the value of jewelry stones, in the circles of gemologists they now prefer to call them inclusions. Moreover, CHARACTERISTIC small defects and inclusions, visible only under a magnifying glass or even with the naked eye, today emphasize the NATURAL origin of the stone.

Recently, it has been repeatedly observed how buyers refuse to buy very expensive large transparent and defect-free blue sapphires, as they doubt their natural origin (and, unfortunately, in many cases not unreasonably). The same applies to bright green fairly large defect-free emeralds, most often today also synthetic.

Relatively often there are inclusions of minerals both of the same type (for example, diamond in diamond) and alien ones (for example, zircon in sapphire). Although the inclusions are small, they still provide a lot to understand the growth conditions of the host crystal (called the host crystal).

Inclusion minerals can be earlier than the host crystal, which simply captures them during growth (overgrowth), for example, rutile inclusions in quartz.

But they can also be formed from the melt simultaneously with the host crystal, which captures them due to faster growth. In addition, there are also mineral inclusions that are later in relation to the host crystal. They are formed from solutions or fluids (gases) that have penetrated into the crystal through cracks.

Organic inclusions in an unchanged form are found only in amber. Plant remains and insects preserved in it give us direct evidence of life on Earth 50 million years before us. All other fossils are formed by metamorphism and replacement of the original flora and fauna that lived on our planet and in the ancient ocean millions of years ago.

The inclusions also include crystal structure distortions, signs of growth and crystallization phases, and colored bands. They arise due to the uneven growth of the mineral with the changing nature of the solutions from which crystallization occurred. Voids filled with liquids (water, liquid carbon dioxide) and gases (carbon dioxide and monoxide) are also considered among the inclusions. With the simultaneous presence of liquid and gas, inclusions are called two-phase, and if they also contain small crystals, they are called three-phase. In obsidian, glass imitations and synthetic gemstones, in contrast to natural stones (minerals), air bubbles are often found.

Even accumulations of small breaks and cracks (the so-called "tails" or "clouds"), whether they arose due to internal stresses or as a result of external mechanical influences, experts classify as inclusions. They are found inside stones, and sometimes reach their surface. Through such cracks, air and solutions can enter the stone, causing discoloration. When the cracks "heal" all foreign matter is forced out again, but the "scars" along such cracks give out the old seam. In most cases, both amateurs and experts believe that inclusions reduce the value of gemstones, since they have a detrimental effect on their color, optical effects and mechanical strength, but increase the cost of mineralogical specimens. The cracks could contain uranium (blue diamonds), cinnabar (red), gold (yellow). It's poisonous and dangerous.

However, some mineral inclusions, as well as parallel hollow channels, generate light effects that are among the most valuable qualities of a gemstone: the effect cat eye, light figures ("stars") and a silky sheen, as well as the formation of dendrites. The golden inclusions of rutile in rock crystal or smoky quartz are very effective, especially in those cases where needle-like rutile crystals are collected in star-shaped aggregates. This gives additional value to the stone.

Recently, inclusions, along with optical properties, have become increasingly important in the diagnosis of natural and synthetic gemstones. Many types of inclusions are so characteristic that thanks to them it is possible to recognize fakes and synthetic stones, and sometimes to determine the deposits from which natural stones. But we must remember that the presence of defects does not guarantee the natural origin of the stone!!

Volcanic (effusive) rocks formed during an eruption

  • Sedimentary rocks formed by mechanical destruction of rocks (destruction product)
  • Sedimentary rocks, newly formed rocks that have arisen with the participation of chemical weathering
  • Metamorphic rocks (metamorphites) - gneisses, shales, marbles, limestones, kimberlite tektites
  • Meteorites and ores, ore minerals and mining
  • World production of precious stones and gems, deposits
  • The beginning of the extraction of precious stones can be considered those distant times when a person first picked up a beautiful transparent pebble from the ground or found a piece of orange amber on the seashore.

    The extraction of stones begins in the offices of scientists: with the study of rocks, their origin, analysis of their content. Exploration of deposits is carried out, samples are taken from drilled wells. It happens that mining is carried out along with exploration. When it becomes clear how much precious material can be mined in a particular deposit, then such a deposit is considered explored, and work on the extraction of jewelry stones can begin.

    The way gemstones are mined depends on the form in which they are found in nature. Stones can lie in deep veins in the parent rock, and you can’t get close to them, otherwise than underground. This happens quite rarely. Most gemstones are found in

    placers . They also contain hollow nodules with walls of chalcedony, lined from the inside with crystals - geodes . From the outside, a geode is no different from an ordinary boulder, and only if you split or saw it, you can find inside the splendor of sparkling crystals: purple amethysts, yellow citrines and other minerals. Opal, chalcedony and agate often form in voids - gas bubbles of basalt and andesitic lavas.

    The parent rock is subject to weathering, erosion, and the stones contained in it accumulate around (

    eluvial placers) or are carried away by rainwater and deposited in the soil of rivers, the coastal strip of oceans and seas (alluvial, coastal-marine). In the pebble placers of Sri Lanka, wonderful sapphires, rubies and spinels are found. Coastal-ocean placers on the west coast of Africa, in Namibia, are rich in diamonds, and many tons of sand are washed to extract them. On the Baltic coast, amber is washed by the surf.

    Having an overall greater density than rock-forming minerals, gemstones carried away by the current settle faster as the water flow weakens. There is, one might say, a natural “washing out” of precious stones, and in some places quite a lot of them accumulate; even primitive soil washing in basins gives good results. However jewelry stones in placers - not of the highest quality, they are crushed, damaged, rolled or completely abraded. It is understandable: hundreds of kilometers the stones traveled, torn from the primary,

    indigenous deposits to be deposited in the secondary. In the parent rock, stones are preserved in their original form, and it is in primary deposits that the best samples precious stones, but in order to get to them, you need to crush hard rock, separate semi-precious raw materials from it. This method is not very productive: you need to remove a lot of waste rock, spend time and effort, which, in turn, leads to an increase in the cost of mining - jewelry stones. So in our time, diamond mining is carried out extensively inkimberlite pipes- tubular bodies of various sizes, formed during the breakthrough of gases through the earth's crust. When viewed from above, the pipe looks like a huge round tapering cone with roads laid along its walls for transporting ore. The kimberlite rock consists mainly of olivine, pyroxenes, garnet of the pyrope-almandine series, less often - zircon, apatite. At a depth of several hundred meters from the Earth's surface, the pipes gradually narrow and contain less diamonds. Pipes up to 1.5 km in size are of the greatest industrial interest (the Mwadui pipe in Tanzania). More than 1,500 kimberlite bodies are known, but only a few of them have an industrial diamond content (the Premier, De Beers, Kimberley pipes, etc. in South Africa; Majgavan in India; Koidu in Sierra Leone and etc.). In kimberlites, diamonds are unevenly distributed: they occur as single crystals or intergrowths, but nowhere do they form large clusters. It was in South Africa that the world's largest Cullinan diamond was found, which originally weighed 3106 carats (621.2 grams!).

    It is considered profitable to develop deposits with a diamond content of about 0.4-0.5 ct/m3 (one carat is equal to 0.2 g). If the pipe contains diamonds of exceptional quality, this figure may be lower, and by the end of the pipe, the bill is fractions of a carat per ton. It's scary to imagine how much diamond-bearing ore needs to be processed so that a jeweler can make a pair of earrings and a ring with diamonds. But, I must say, some pipes produced significant amounts of diamonds in the middle of the 20th century: "Premier" - about 55 million carats per year, but the average figure is kept at the level of 2 - 2.5 million carats per year.

    In Russia, diamond deposits are concentrated in western Yakutia (Mir, Udachnaya, Aikhal pipes, etc.); explored deposits in the Arkhangelsk region. Unfortunately, some pipes in Yakutia, such as "Mir", "Internationalnaya", have reached their design depth, and now they will have to switch to underground mining, which is extremely expensive.

    Jewelry stones are mined using

    underground works , otherwise mine workings, oropen way- in quarries. Underground works, as already mentioned, are the most expensive and primarily affect the cost of the extracted stones. They are produced only if it is known for sure that there is a vein with precious stones in the rock. A vein is a mineral body that fills a crack in a rock. In this way, along with other minerals, some minerals are also mined, for example, jet, accompanying coal, or rock crystal and other gem-quality quartz that comes across with iron ore. Well, if associated production is organized at a high level, more often it happens that it simply does not exist. Adits are laid in the rock - horizontal or inclined workings, first for exploration, then for developing the occurrence. In addition, a network of adits and pits (vertical workings) is needed for ventilation, transportation, water drainage, etc. Mandatory is the presence of two exits from underground workings. For all these works, special equipment is used, which costs a lot of money. Therefore, this kind of mining of gems (except, perhaps, diamonds) is unprofitable. Fortunately, it is not suitable for the vast majority of stones that are mined in an open way.

    In most countries, especially in African and Asian countries, open-pit mining is carried out using primitive methods (except for diamonds). The easiest open way is to collect gems from the surface of the earth. This is possible in the beds of dried up rivers, in rock crevices, on the coast near the surf; some crystals are knocked down directly from the rocks, using both ordinary hammers and jackhammers, and blowing up the rock (amethysts on the coast of the White Sea). In the river, mining is carried out by washing the soil in baskets and other similar devices by damming the river: the water flows faster, carrying away the soil raised by the workers from the bottom. Heavier stones settle to the bottom, and then the washing begins. Unfortunately, lighter gemstones like beryl, tourmaline, or quartz are lost. Such gems, having a density of up to about 3 units on the Mohs scale, are extracted from primary deposits, as well as from placers located on the ground or underground. If the placer was formed in ancient times, then it is covered with a multi-meter layer of soil, which must be removed - to open the deposit.

    Stripping worksmade by hand or mechanically. The Celestine deposit in Beyneu-Kyr in Turkmenistan, now completely forgotten, is being developed by manual labor of enthusiasts and lovers of minerals.

    To remove thicker loose overburden masses, scrapers are used (an earth-moving machine that cuts the soil with a bucket and transports it to the dump); conveyor loaders, draglines (a machine with a bucket suspended on the boom); bucket wheel excavators (resembling a water mill that draws not water, but earth) and many other unusual equipment. To move from a waste rock quarry, not only dump trucks and conveyors are used, but in some cases, water supplied under high pressure. If the overburden is too strong, then they are processed using tractors equipped with rippers, or they are destroyed by drilling and blasting.

    The reservoir (or reservoir) is now ready for extraction. The next step is to determine how the development will be carried out. Beautiful ornamental stones are extracted using the buroklin method or manual disassembly. In some quarries, auger rigs (with a screw for drilling) are used. Sometimes pneumatic devices such as a jackhammer or perforator are used for open pit mining; finishing and ornamental stone is cut into blocks. This takes into account the fragility of the most valuable rocks - mining is carried out without blasting.

    In the very center of the Kola Peninsula is the Keiva mountain range, where Ploskaya Mountain, the world's largest amazonite deposit, is hidden. This breed of amazing color lies in huge layers almost at the surface. But to get to this place, you need to overcome huge swamp areas on all-terrain vehicles. Helicopters are used to take out the prey. The world's largest deposits of kyanite, garnet (almandine) and staurolite are also located there. Of course, there is no equipment there, and enthusiasts or small work parties occasionally work in the quarries.

    Each country has its own rules regarding exploration and mining rights. In the USA in the state of Utah, in the famous Thomas Range topaz valley, anyone can mine topazes, which are literally lying under their feet there. The condition is only a hand tool. If in Russia precious stones are defined by law that cannot be mined without special permission, then, for example, in Mozambique, the extraction of gold and precious stones is a way of subsistence for entire villages. Prospectors in many countries are the poorest sections of the population; Whole families work on the development of placers. There are deposits in Mozambique

    Large and important groups of minerals in many activities include precious stones or gems. Groups of such stones today do not have clear distinctions and accepted common names, therefore the concept of gems is very vague and can be applied to many stones, minerals or rocks that can be used in the manufacture jewelry or in other industries. Nevertheless, gems are classified into precious, semi-precious and ornamental minerals and rocks. All of them are transparent and colored and have such qualities as:

    • great strength
    • transparency
    • unusual color (drawing)
    • radiance and brilliance
    • high light scattering
    • the possibility of cutting, grinding and polishing.

    Transparent minerals are used mainly for cutting, while colored stones are used for various decorations and in jewelry. And, of course, all gem minerals are valued for their beauty, rarity and durability.

    Stone mining methods

    Gemstones have been mined since time immemorial. We can safely say that the first mining occurred at the moment when a pebble of unusual shape or beauty was found on the ground, on the sea coast or in the mountains.

    At the moment, all stones are carefully studied: rocks are determined, their origin and composition are analyzed. Then the found deposits are explored, wells are drilled and special samples are taken. Sometimes the deposit is still being explored, and mining is already underway. However, the found deposits become explored only when it is possible to determine how many gems can be mined.

    How to carry out the extraction of jewelry is determined depending on their location. Quite rarely, but it happens that deep veins of stone are located directly in the parent rock, and here mining is, of course, difficult. But basically the location of gems is placers. They come across empty nodules, inside of which are crystals called geodes. They look like an ordinary boulder, but if you open it, you can find unusual sparkling crystals: purple amethysts, yellow citrines and other minerals. But such stones as opals, chalcedony or agate can be in gas bubbles formed from basalt and andesitic lava. Affects the mother breed environment, weathering, erosion, as a result of this, an accumulation of minerals occurs, the so-called eluvial placer, or stones with the help of rain streams end up in rivers (alluvial placer) or belong to the seas (coastal-marine placer). For example, on the island of Sri Lanka, such precious stones as sapphires, rubies and spinels were found in pebble placers. And on the coastal-ocean placers, which are located in the western part of Africa, diamonds were found, which are extracted by washing several tons of coastal sand. Almost the same situation is with amber, which is rich in the Baltic coast. After all, gems, unlike minerals, are more dense and the process of settling in them occurs faster as soon as the flow carrying them is weakened.

    This so-called "natural alluvium" gives good deposits, sometimes just ordinary primitive soil washing is enough. But, it is worth noting that such placers of stones usually contain not very high-quality samples, because during such a journey all kinds of damage or crushing into small parts occur. Therefore, in order to extract valuable minerals, one has to get to primary deposits by crushing hard rock. This is hard, long and costly work, because you need to get rid of low-quality raw materials, including waste rock. And the cost of gems with such extraction is higher.

    Currently, diamonds are mined using kimberlite pipes - these are tubular bodies with different sizes, which were formed as a result of gas breakthrough. There are more than one and a half thousand such pipes, but less than a dozen are used for industrial production. As a rule, clusters are not large, mostly single crystals. The largest find was discovered in South Africa, the weight of the Cullinan diamond was just over three thousand carats. Russian diamonds are mainly of Yakut origin, only a small part was found near Arkhangelsk. But the use of kimberlite pipes is no longer possible everywhere, in some places it is necessary to use underground mining, which is very expensive.

    For the extraction of gem minerals, you can use underground work (mining) or open methods (quarry). It was mentioned above that, a distinctive feature of underground work is their high cost, so this method is used to accurately determine the mineral body, saturated with gems. Basically, these are, of course, diamonds, the real price of which will be able to recoup the necessary costs.

    It is worth noting that in many countries, this applies primarily to Africa and Asia, they mainly use primitive mining methods. As a rule, they simply collect precious stones from various surfaces of the earth. With the help of damming of rivers, soil is washed. It should be noted that there is a loss of such gems as beryl, tourmaline or quartz. Minerals with a density of less than three units of the Mohs scale are also extracted from a placer, which can be located both inside and outside the earth's surface. When covering the placer with soil, it is removed or somehow opened mechanically or simply by hand. So, for example, celestite gem was mined by amateur enthusiasts in Turkmenistan, which is now an almost abandoned deposit. And on the Kola Peninsula near the Keiva mountain range, the largest deposits of such a mineral as amazonite were found. It has an amazing color, and its layers are very close. Helicopters are used for its extraction, because it is not possible to deliver it in any other way. Kyanite, garnet, and staurolite were found in the same places. But the work is carried out by the hands of enthusiasts and small work teams.

    Production features in different countries

    The norms for the extraction and exploration of gems-minerals in all countries are set differently. For example, in the United States there is a well-known topaz valley and topaz can be mined there by an ordinary person, but only with the use of hand tools. And if in some countries the law requires additional permission for the extraction of certain precious stones, then in Africa there are villages that exist only at the expense of gold placers found nearby. Quartz, emeralds, aquamarines, colored tourmaline were also found here. The villagers work off the placers with their hands, and then resell them to the buyer, receiving a pittance for this. However, then these finds enter the jewelry markets at an artificially high price. The same applies to the deposits of Guinea, where the extraction of diamond placers does not require special costs, moreover, there is no state control and customs strictness. As a result, there is no real estimate of the volume of mined precious stones.

    Features of production in Russia

    As for Russia, there is no effect of legislative norms and rules here either. The Federal Law only describes diamonds, emeralds, rubies, sapphires, alexandrite, pearls and amber. However, there are over a thousand different gem minerals on the Russian market, and most of the deposits have already been explored.

    Many gems are unique and their cost is very high, for example, this is the Yakut charoite. The lilac-colored stone lends itself remarkably to polishing, is used to make fine jewelry and various decors. No more than a hundred tons are mined annually, otherwise, if the production is exceeded, depletion of reserves is possible. This rare gem, even when uncut, can cost upwards of $100 per kilogram.

    Let's give an example on the situation with jasper. Even in the USSR, work was carried out at the largest deposit near Orenburg, then variegated jasper was mined almost three hundred tons per year. The stone was used for the construction of the metro in Moscow and with its help the decoration of the Kremlin was carried out. However, since the 1990s, the deposit has been abandoned, although there was still a reserve of about seven thousand tons. Currently, work is being restored, at least a mining license has been issued, but for some reason a St. Petersburg company, and not local prospectors, took up this task.

    Mining precious gems It is rightly considered a time-consuming and troublesome business, and there are many good reasons for this. First of all, as it should be, geological exploration is not carried out. The last successful find happened in the mid-90s. Then black jasper was discovered in the Republic of Tyva. The gem is not particularly beautiful, but it has amazing strength. A preliminary assessment showed that the found deposit is over five hundred thousand tons. And this is perhaps the only success for last years. The remaining deposits, as a rule, are mostly little explored or have already developed their own.

    And as for non-precious gems, they are generally, as a rule, an accidental discovery due to the discovery of other fossils in the neighborhood. In addition, if the extraction of precious stones is at least somehow accounted for by the state, a special license is issued, and so on, then, as for the rest of the minerals, they are completely devoid of any account. For example, Buryatia is famous for its jade deposits. There is also green jade, black and even valuable white jade. According to official statistics, the extraction is over two hundred tons annually, and almost seven hundred tons of stone is mined illegally. Most of the minerals are not processed and are shipped to China, which greatly appreciates this stone and uses it in many industries. In Chinese markets, the price of jade reaches almost two hundred dollars per kilogram, and if it is some kind of product, then ten times higher. And in Russia, the price of a stone is ten to fifteen dollars a kilogram. Thus, in the budget of Buryatia there is an annual loss of huge amounts of money.

    And while the authorities are solving the issue with gems at the legislative level, you should not despair, but it is better to visit such extraordinary lands where you can relax and replenish your own collection of gem minerals. This is Adygea, where quartz, calcite and other minerals are found in the Belorechenskoye deposit, and the White Sea coast with amethyst deposits and other magnificent places. After all, what is income for state power is a happy opportunity for ordinary people to enjoy natural wonders and feel the energy of extraordinary fabulous gems.