The largest diamond found in more than a century has been unearthed at a mine in Botswana, and the country’s president showed off the fist-sized stone to the world at a viewing ceremony Thursday.

The Botswana government says the huge 2,492-carat diamond is the second-biggest ever discovered in a mine. It’s the biggest diamond found since 1905.

  • CaliforniaSober
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    3 months ago

    They likely will! If touched it is then “cut” and less value. The raw “uncut” version is what will sell.

      • CaliforniaSober
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        3 months ago

        Eventually it’s how things go… basically dividing the wealth but ultimately we’re talking about bullshit carbon and shouldn’t be so concerned. Yet…

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          3 months ago

          I mean, just as a scientific object it’s fascinating. I’m not going to be shamed about caring just because other people care for stupid reasons, haha.

      • GreyEyedGhost
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        3 months ago

        Just given the nature of diamonds and light, there are more interesting shapes. They could cut it into a simple cubic, but that wouldn’t be very interesting and you would still have some substantial pieces left over to make other diamonds from. So the usual plan is to cut more or less the largest stone you can while avoiding any major flaws and using a cut that will display the properties of diamond in their best light, and then cutting the rest into diamonds that can be sold, as well. I believe there was a larger diamond found a while back that had two fairly large diamonds cut out of it because the nature of the uncut diamond made that more profitable and esthetically pleasing than if they had just cut a single larger piece.

        Diamonds are interesting and can be pretty, but they’re also valued for vastly more than their worth, and there are other very interesting options for jewelry that are neither as expensive nor as ethically dubious as many diamonds are.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      3 months ago

      And then the buyer will probably cut it into whatever number and carat of individual gems will sell for the most - or so I understand.