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Scientists find 'missing ingredient' for pink diamonds

Pink diamonds are incredibly rare -- and expensive. Scientists know think they know how they were formed
Pink diamonds are incredibly rare -- and expensive. Scientists know think they know how they were formed.

Scientists said on Tuesday they have found the "missing ingredient" for pink diamonds, some of the world's most expensive stones due their rarity and beauty, and the discovery could help find more.

More than 90 percent of all the pink diamonds ever found were discovered at the recently closed Argyle mine in the remote northwest of Australia.

But exactly why Argyle—which unlike most other diamond mines does not sit in the middle of a continent but on the edge of one—produced so many pink gems has remained a mystery.

In a new study published in the journal Nature Communications, a team of Australia-based researchers said the pink diamonds were brought to the Earth's surface by the break up of the first supercontinent around 1.3 billion years ago.

Hugo Olierook, a researcher at Curtin University in the state of Western Australia and the study's lead author, told AFP that two of the three ingredients for forming pink diamonds had already been known.

The first ingredient is carbon—and it must be in the bowels of Earth.

Anything shallower than 150 kilometers (93 miles) deep would be graphite—"that stuff in your pencils, not nearly as pretty on an engagement ring", Olierook said.

The second ingredient is just the right amount of pressure, to damage the otherwise clear diamonds.

"Push just a little bit and it turns pink. Push a little too hard and they turn brown," he said.

Most of the diamonds discovered at Argyle were of this less valuable brown hue, he added.

More than 90 percent of the world's pink diamonds have been found at the Argyle mine, in the remote northwest of Australia
More than 90 percent of the world's pink diamonds have been found at the Argyle mine, in the remote northwest of Australia.

'Like a champagne cork'

The missing ingredient was the volcanic event that sent the diamonds shooting up to the Earth's surface, where humans could get their hands on them.

In the 1980s it was estimated that the Argyle diamonds emerged 1.2 billion years ago.

But there was no "trigger" for the rare diamonds to rise at that time, Olierook said, so the researchers sought to establish a more accurate timeline.

They used a laser thinner than a human hair to probe tiny crystals in an Argyle rock sample supplied by the mine's owner, Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto.

By measuring the age of elements in the crystals, the researchers determined that Argyle was 1.3 billion years old—meaning the diamonds came up 100 million years later than previously thought.

That lines up with the break-up of the world's first supercontinent, known as Nuna or Columbia.

In Nuna, "just about every single landmass on Earth was squashed together", Olierook said.

The immense pressure that twisted color into the diamonds—the second ingredient—occurred during collisions between western Australia and northern Australia 1.8 billion years ago.

When Nuna started to break up five hundred million years later, it re-aggravated the "scar" from that event, Olierook said.

It could be looking at the edge of continents -- not the centre -- to find more pink diamonds, the researchers suggested
It could be looking at the edge of continents -- not the center -- to find more pink diamonds, the researchers suggested.

Magma shot up through this old scar "like a champagne cork going off", taking the diamonds along for the ride, he added.

Study co-author Luc Doucet said such a "massive explosion"—which sent the diamonds traveling at near the speed of sound—has not taken place in recorded human history.

Where to look next?

Over the last 200 years, people have mostly looked for diamonds in the center of massive continents.

But knowing the "missing ingredient" for pink diamonds could assist future efforts to find the rare stones, Olierook said, adding that discovering more was unlikely to be easy or quick.

Old mountain belts marking Nuna's breakup near the edges of continents have the potential to be home to a new "pink diamond paradise", he said, naming Canada, Russia, southern Africa and Australia as possible locations.

John Foden, an expert on diamonds at the University of Adelaide not involved in the study, told AFP that the researchers had "convincingly shown" the age of the Argyle diamonds.

But he cautioned that other diamond-rich provinces had also been linked to Nuna's break-up—and they had not produced pink diamonds.

This suggests that "pinkness seems to be a local Argyle attribute", he added.

The Argyle mine closed in 2020 due to "various financial reasons", Olierook said, meaning the value of pink diamonds could continue to rise as supply stalls.

More information: Hugo Olierook, Emplacement of the Argyle diamond deposit into an ancient rift zone triggered by supercontinent breakup, Nature Communications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-40904-8. www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-40904-8

Journal information: Nature Communications

© 2023 AFP

Citation: Scientists find 'missing ingredient' for pink diamonds (2023, September 23) retrieved 27 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2023-09-scientists-ingredient-pink-diamonds.html
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