Diamonds in Nature: A Guide to Rough Diamonds illustrates and explains the unique properties of natural diamonds, such as their crystal shapes, colors, surface textures, and mineral inclusions. It also contains up-to-date information about the origin and scientific significance of diamonds. With more than 200 high-quality photographs and drawings, it is an invaluable reference for the professional geoscientist and anyone with an interest in diamonds.
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From the reviews:
"The focus of the book is exclusively on natural uncut diamonds, their characteristic features, and their mineral and fluid inclusions. How these provide insights into the growth processes of diamonds and the workings of our planet's interior is clearly developed and explained. The authors achieve their aims in an excellent style. ... The book should also appeal to a wider audience of people outside of the earth sciences who wish to become acquainted with a fascinating detective story that has already placed these small carbon crystals in a unique position as closed-system repositories for evidence of geologic processes that took place billions of years ago." (John Gurney, Economic Geology, Vol. 106 (8), December 2011)
"The authors are from the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton. ... They have done an excellent job in describing the geology and crystallography of natural diamonds. This book is a scholarlywork: each statement has a citation to one or more of the 325 research papers alphabetically listed in References. ... Exactly a century after Fersmann and Goldschmidt published their book ... we now have the pleasure of a highly recommended, colourful and up-to-date successor, also produced in Heidelberg." (Moreton Moore, Crystallography Reviews, Vol. 18 (4), 2012)
"The focus of the book is exclusively on natural uncut diamonds, their characteristic features, and their mineral and fluid inclusions. How these provide insights into the growth processes of diamonds and the workings of our planet's interior is clearly developed and explained. The authors achieve their aims in an excellent style. ... The book should also appeal to a wider audience of people outside of the earth sciences who wish to become acquainted with a fascinating detective story that has already placed these small carbon crystals in a unique position as closed-system repositories for evidence of geologic processes that took place billions of years ago." (John Gurney, Economic Geology, Vol. 106 (8), December 2011)
"The authors are from the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton. ... They have done an excellent job in describing the geology and crystallography of natural diamonds. This book is a scholarlywork: each statement has a citation to one or more of the 325 research papers alphabetically listed in References. ... Exactly a century after Fersmann and Goldschmidt published their book ... we now have the pleasure of a highly recommended, colourful and up-to-date successor, also produced in Heidelberg." (Moreton Moore, Crystallography Reviews, Vol. 18 (4), 2012)