appledapple.com appledapple.com
   Home >> About Us >> Privacy of Info >> Terms & Conditions >> Add Your Link >> Add Your Article
Search:   
Free links exchange
 

Academics & Learning

Eating & Drinking

Travel & Accommodation

Internet & Computers

Careers & Employment

Home & Garden

Entertainment

Business & Commerce

Vehicles & Automotive

Science & Research

Sports & Adventure

Teens & Children

Politics & Government

Fashion & Lifestyle

Art & Creative

Fitness & Health

Medicine & Treatment

Online & Board Games

Online Shopping

Society & Issues

Issues & News

Property & Agents

Investment & Finance

Self Healing

 

Home –› Online Shopping –› Jewelry Mall
 

Growing Diamonds?

 

Author: Gregg Hall

Aron Weingarten brings the yellow diamond up to the stainless steel jeweler's loupe he holds against his eye. We are in Antwerp, Belgium, in Weingarten's marbled and gilded living room on the edge of the city's gem district, the center of the diamond universe.

Nearly 80 percent of the world's rough and polished diamonds move through the hands of Belgian gem traders like Weingarten, a dealer who wears the thick beard and black suit of the Hasidim.

"This is very rare stone," he says, almost to himself, in thickly accented English. "Yellow diamonds of this color are very hard to find. It is probably worth 10, maybe 15 thousand dollars."

"I have two more exactly like it in my pocket," I tell him.

He puts the diamond down and looks at me seriously for the first time. I place the other two stones on the table. They are all the same color and size. To find three nearly identical yellow diamonds is like flipping a coin 10,000 times and never seeing tails. "These are cubic zirconium?" Weingarten says without much hope.

"No, they're real," I tell him. "But they were made by a machine in Florida for less than a hundred dollars."

Weingarten shifts uncomfortably in his chair and stares at the glittering gems on his dining room table. "Unless they can be detected," he says, "these stones will bankrupt the industry."

Put pure carbon under enough heat and pressure - say, 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit and 50,000 atmospheres - and it will crystallize into the hardest material known. Those were the conditions that first forged diamonds deep in Earth's mantle 3.3 billion years ago.

Replicating that environment in a lab isn't easy, but that hasn't kept dreamers from trying. Since the mid-19th century, dozens of these modern alchemists have been injured in accidents and explosions while attempting to manufacture diamonds.

Recent decades have seen some modest successes. Starting in the 1950s, engineers managed to produce tiny crystals for industrial purposes - to coat saws, drill bits, and grinding wheels.

But this summer, the first wave of gem-quality manufactured diamonds began to hit the market. They are grown in a warehouse in Florida by a roomful of Russian-designed machines spitting out 3-carat roughs 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Author Bio:
Gregg Hall is a proclaimed scripter. Gregg likes to write articles about this topic.
You can also reach this article by using: jewelry stores, jewelry, sterling silver jewelry, body jewelry, silver jewelry, wholesale jewelry
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
The Cons of Online Aution Sites Like Ebay
 
5 Reasons Why Playing Music On Your Auctions Is A Bummer Of An Idea
 
Exercise Bikes - No Excuses, 30 Minutes A Day On A Bike Will Change Your Life
 
Pheromone Scents and Colognes to Attract Women and Men - Really?
 
If Your Shoes Could Do the Talking Instead of the Walking
 
How To Find Good Wholesale Deals on EBay
 
Dressing for Hot Weather
 
Bragada Mattress: Orthopedic Research Institute's Approved Mattresses
 
Buying a Loose Diamond
 
Cat Jewelry: Freeing the Inner Feline
 
 
 
Home >> Privacy of Info >> Terms & Conditions  
All Rights Reserved © 2006 www.appledapple.com