Today out tour group was treated to a
very special conducted tour around the Kimberley's famous “Argyle
Diamond Mine” from where the most precious of all diamonds come;
that diamond being the pink diamond. Although we were travelling in
our coach with a guide from the mine, we still had to go through all
the security procedures that every visitor to the mine has to do. We
were told that on no account were we to pick up anything from the
ground, if we dropped anything we were to ask our guide to retrieve
it. If we picked anything up from the ground we would have to undergo
a search to ensure that we had not picked up a diamond as well as the
object we had dropped.
Our tour started in the gallery where
diamonds of different sizes were on display as well as illustrated
descriptions that told how diamonds came to be formed and how the mine
had changed from being open cut to an underground mine.
This first photograph shows the two
largest diamonds ever found at the Argyle mine. They are still in the
raw – uncut – state so they are not glittery and light reflective
as are facetted diamonds.
This next photograph is of a display
that showed the different graded sizes and the variety of colours
that are found. Most of the diamonds are industrial grade diamonds
that are used on saws and sandpapers. Only a small percentage are
flawless and top gem quality but these are the ones that bring in the
most money, of course.
Included in the price of the mine tour
was lunch at the Agyle Village. The Argyle Village is where the
people who work in the mine, live while they are here. The huge
dining room was set out with tables and there was a beautiful cold,
buffet lunch set out for us to help ourselves.
There was no one but our group in the
dining room for lunch – the mine workers have their lunch over in a
canteen at the mine and only use this dining room for breakfast and
for the evening dinner.
It was a delicious lunch and the coffee
was so good!
Once we had eaten we were then taken
out to the open cut mine where the whole diamond mining operation
first started. The pit was huge – but standing on the edge and
looking over it made the hole look so much smaller than it really
was. There were no vehicles moving around in it to give scale.
Operations in the open cut area had to stop because the sides of the
mine became so unstable that it was dangerous. There are a few very
visible landslips where the contouring has collapsed. You may be able
to see a couple of the large slips on the left hand side of this
photograph.
We were taken (in the coach) under the
equipment that crushes and separates the diamonds from the host rock,
there were conveyor belts and huge tumblers and pipes that made us
feel like midgets! It was all very impressive and very interesting.
However! Although the pink diamond is the most expensive diamond and
although there are several other colours of diamonds I personally
feel that a diamond is identifiable as a diamond when it is white! I
would confuse a “champagne” diamond with a citrine and a pale
blue with a blue topaz! That shows my ignorance!
There was much chatter in the coach
after our mine visit but we had something else to think about when we
stopped at a road house to have a drink and an opportunity to stretch
our legs. All around the perimeter of the parking area there were
large stones, many of which had interesting paintings on them. These
ones are easily recognizable as Australian animals, crocodile, wallaby
and emu.
This second picture is not so obvious –
unless, like us, you had taken a ride in a small plane to look down
on the strange striped mounds that are calle the Bungle Bungles.
This evening we are staying at Halls
Creek but we shall be packing our bags into the coach after we have
eaten breakfast so we will not be staying here for very long. This
has been another wonderful day! Certainly had no time to be bored!
AJ
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