Rough diamonds including several fancy diamonds from the Argyle diamond mine, Australia. Photo "Copyright © 2014 Rio Tinto." |
Yes, and the same goes for Colorado, Kansas, Montana and Wyoming - sure, people have looked in the Wyoming Craton for diamonds, but not like Canada. After working on this and other gold and gemstone projects for 3 decades, the amount of funding spent by the Wyoming Geological Survey and University of Wyoming would be spare change compared to the amount of exploration dollars spent in Canada! The State of Wyoming (including Federal grants), may have spent a total of $100K over 30 years. And for much of that time, research was part time.
The amount of money spent in Wyoming migh be equivalent of the amount paid on snow removal for a drill rig site in Canada. And note, I was told by a geologist and former member of the Wyoming Geological Survey advisory board, that Canadians were spending on average, $1 million per kimberlite discovery - this was only for discovery of a single kimberlite pipe, sill or dike, and did not include additional $millions later spent to test newly discovered pipes for diamonds!
Even so, we must congratulate the Wyoming Geological Survey for providing mountains of information in books and publications on this diamond and gemstone province, and number of discoveries made with such a tiny budget. Now add it all of the expenditures from past diamond mining companies spent to explore for diamonds in the Wyoming province including drilling, bulk sampling, mill construction and mining. Now, the exploration expenditures may be as much as $10 million - but again, is nothing compared to Canada, where capitalization for the Ekati mine, alone, was more than $1.3 billion (and that doesn't include the $billions of additional dollars spent to find hundreds of other diamond deposits and develop other mines)(pre-Biden prices). And the great majority of the Wyoming Province exploration money was been spent in Colorado by various diamond companies - not Wyoming.
Diamonds were found in a group of kimberlites along the edge of the Wyoming Craton in 1975 in both Colorado and Wyoming. Several detrital diamonds were found in the Wyoming Province in Montana in the past and more recently diamonds were recovered in a kimberlite in that region. Additionally, kimberlites, lamproites and lamprophyres were found all over the Wyoming Province but these remain a scientific curiosity. Over the next three decades, Wyoming spent essentially nothing compared to the $billions that have been spent in Canada exploring and developing diamond deposits. Yet, hundreds of cryptovolcanic structures of unknown origin remained unexplored and have yet to be drilled in the Wyoming Province. Is the Wyoming Province also a major diamond province? After many years of talking to hundreds of geologists and prospectors about the kimberlites and potential placer diamond deposits, one prospector finally panned one of the many locations suggested by the author and reportedly found a cache of diamonds including one, flawless, 5-carat diamond verified by the University of North Carolina.
So, diamonds have been found in kimberlite in Colorado, Montana and Wyoming and possibly in Kansas. So, why don't the state legislators create legislation that will attract companies to search for diamonds in their states?
New book on gemstones, diamonds, and gold tells prospectors where to find these gemstones and how to identify them. Rated 5 stars by Amazon customers |
Cryptovolcanic structure near Douglas Creek in the Medicine Bow Mountains of Wyoming. This has been suggested to be an impact structure, but it is more likely to be a kimberlite pipe. |
Thank you Gem World for recognizing our website as one of the top 40 in the world |
Another cryptovolcanic structure of unknown origin - kimberlite? |
General map showing diamond mines and diamond anomalies in North America. It should be apparent there is considerable potential. Much of the high potential for commercial diamond deposits are areas known as cratons (from Hausel, 2007, 2008). |
View of the Wyoming craton showing locations of kimberlites and related anomalies. |