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Thank you Carole as well Bob for your comments.
According to the True Geology the Diamond are the early markers of the
genesis of Carbon on the planet, and are common compound of the ultrabasis
( Peridotite) part of the Lithosphere. Hence the diamonds reserves are
somehow on par with Oil reserves and amounting indeed to Millions of tons !
Those diamonds are of course freely available by the thousand both under the
sea where as well numerous eroded diamond pipes exist, but as well on some
places where the reserves indeed might amount to many millions of tons
indeed !
The common understanding presiding over all ( and wrong ) geological
theories are mainly :
Firstly the fact the Earth was "created" on present orbit
Secondly that the conditions presently are the ones which were present
through Geological times, in clear that although some variation in
atmospheric content are accepted, roughly what we can observe is what was
there from the start ( Lyell Uniformism)
Thirdly that all elements were present from the start of Earth "Creation"
( Sci000ntific Big Bang or Divine Magical Wand )
In fact, all these three statements above are completely dogmatic, and are
underlying all Official Understanding of what is Earth & Mankind History.
... but the answer is elsewhere and the True Geology has all those answers
indeed !
With best regards
--
Sir Jean-Paul Turcaud
Australia Mining Pioneer
~~ Ignorance Is The Cosmic Sin, The One Never Forgiven ~~
"Bob Officer" <bobofficers@xxxxxxxxxxx> a écrit dans le message de news:
7v8pv15nbus58tprbk7oh5uukjn1629n26@xxxxxxxxxx
> On Thu, 23 Feb 2006 02:27:58 +1100, in sci.geo.earthquakes, "Carole"
> <hubbca2003@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
snip
of diamonds is to make them
>>scarce -- that is, reduce production." And that is exactly what the
>>company
>>has done for decades now.
>>
>>There are reportedly nearly one billion diamonds produced every year, and
>>that is only a fraction of what could be produced. Diamonds are not,
>>conventional wisdom to the contrary, a scarce resource, and they are
>>therefore not intrinsically valuable. Without the market manipulation,
>>experts estimate that the true value of diamonds would be roughly $30 per
>>carat.
>
> I pay roughly 7-8 us dollars a carat for <graded polishing dust>
> diamonds, and I am a small lot end user. I used to recycle the
> polishing compound... but it now costs more to do that than buy new.
>
> Carole, I guess you have never seen a diamond pipe?
>
>
> --
> Ak'toh'di
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