May 4, 2007

Black diamonds born in space

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New analysis of the world’s toughest black diamonds suggests they may be visitors from deep space, possibly the unaltered chunks of a long dead, exploded star.

Standard natural diamonds like this one are hard but not as tough under stress as the black or carbonado diamonds (Image: iStockphoto)

< ?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /> The evidence comes in the form of telltale traces of nitrogen and hydrogen in black ‘carbonado’ diamonds, which don’t match any terrestrial signature.

Instead, the molecules seem to reflect a mixture of gases seen in interstellar space, says Professor Steve Haggarty of Florida International University.

He and colleagues publish their research in a recent issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters.

"There is absolutely nothing to compare with these objects," says Haggarty.

"[A total of] 600 metric tonnes of carbonado diamonds have been mined, stolen, bartered and adorned in the last century."

That’s a small fraction of the world diamond supply and it all comes from just two places: the < ?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />Central African Republic and Brazil. Oddly enough, neither place has any of the expected geological signs of being a diamond-bearing region.

Interest in carbonados is more than academic.

These diamonds are particularly prized because they are just as hard as regular diamonds but far tougher under stress. That makes them extremely sought after for industrial drilling and cutting.

Finding out how carbonado diamonds are created would not only help geologists search for more, but help diamond makers figure out how to synthesise the useful gems, Haggarty says.

The extraterrestrial trace elements the researchers found fits some other suspicious signs in the minerals, says Haggarty.

For one thing, carbonado diamonds are very porous - a strange thing for a mineral thought to have formed under extreme pressures deep in the Earth.
Black or carbonado diamonds, like this, are only found in two places on Earth, the Central African Republic and Brazil (Image: Steve Haggerty)

The diamonds also often have a glazed side that appears to be some sort of weathering, says Haggarty.

No known Earth weather can do that to a diamond. So was it, perhaps, the hard radiation ‘weather’ of interstellar space?

Another puzzle is those two locations. Take plate tectonic movement of the continents back in time and the Central African Republic and Brazil are joined.

"It’s exactly the same piece of real estate," says Haggarty. "Not a single carbonado has been found in a conventional diamond setting."

One possible explanation is that the carbonado diamonds are a chunk of a star that exploded long before the formation of the Sun. The chunk was floating through space and was caught up in the formation of Earth, and it’s been here ever since.

"I think that is not an unreasonable idea," says geologist and researcher of ancient minerals Professor Robert Hazen from the Carnegie Institution of Washington’s Geophysical Laboratory.

"They are perhaps the oldest thing you can hold in your hand."

Black diamonds born in space

Filed under: My Post

New analysis of the world’s toughest black diamonds suggests they may be visitors from deep space, possibly the unaltered chunks of a long dead, exploded star.

Standard natural diamonds like this one are hard but not as tough under stress as the black or carbonado diamonds (Image: iStockphoto)

 

The evidence comes in the form of telltale traces of nitrogen and hydrogen in black ‘carbonado’ diamonds, which don’t match any terrestrial signature.

Instead, the molecules seem to reflect a mixture of gases seen in interstellar space, says Professor Steve Haggarty of Florida International University.

He and colleagues publish their research in a recent issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters.

"There is absolutely nothing to compare with these objects," says Haggarty.

"[A total of] 600 metric tonnes of carbonado diamonds have been mined, stolen, bartered and adorned in the last century."

That’s a small fraction of the world diamond supply and it all comes from just two places: the Central African Republic and Brazil. Oddly enough, neither place has any of the expected geological signs of being a diamond-bearing region.

Interest in carbonados is more than academic.

These diamonds are particularly prized because they are just as hard as regular diamonds but far tougher under stress. That makes them extremely sought after for industrial drilling and cutting.

Finding out how carbonado diamonds are created would not only help geologists search for more, but help diamond makers figure out how to synthesise the useful gems, Haggarty says.

The extraterrestrial trace elements the researchers found fits some other suspicious signs in the minerals, says Haggarty.

For one thing, carbonado diamonds are very porous - a strange thing for a mineral thought to have formed under extreme pressures deep in the Earth.
Black or carbonado diamonds, like this, are only found in two places on Earth, the Central African Republic and Brazil (Image: Steve Haggerty)

The diamonds also often have a glazed side that appears to be some sort of weathering, says Haggarty.

No known Earth weather can do that to a diamond. So was it, perhaps, the hard radiation ‘weather’ of interstellar space?

Another puzzle is those two locations. Take plate tectonic movement of the continents back in time and the Central African Republic and Brazil are joined.

"It’s exactly the same piece of real estate," says Haggarty. "Not a single carbonado has been found in a conventional diamond setting."

One possible explanation is that the carbonado diamonds are a chunk of a star that exploded long before the formation of the Sun. The chunk was floating through space and was caught up in the formation of Earth, and it’s been here ever since.

"I think that is not an unreasonable idea," says geologist and researcher of ancient minerals Professor Robert Hazen from the Carnegie Institution of Washington’s Geophysical Laboratory.

"They are perhaps the oldest thing you can hold in your hand."

Black Diamond

Filed under: My Post

The $2 million Black Orlov Diamond owned by Johnstown businessman J. Dennis Petimezas, has been linked to the deaths of three previous owners who apparently killed themselves.

 

 Johnstown businessman J. Dennis Petimezas, owner of the famed diamond and president of Watchmaker’s Diamonds and Jewelry, is in Hollywood in anticipation that Huffman will choose his necklace to wear at Sunday’s ceremonies.

“I will just say she has been approached,” a secretive Petimezas said by telephone from his Los Angeles hotel room.

While Petimezas wouldn’t confirm Huffman will be wearing the necklace, reports in USA Today said the actress is tempted to don the $2 million treasure. People will just have to tune in Sunday night to see if Huffman is wearing the Johnstown jewel.

Comedy Central’s Jon Stewart will host the 78th annual awards show, which will be broadcast at 8 p.m. on ABC. It will be preceded by a one-hour red-carpet arrivals show.

The curse of the diamond is said to be responsible for three deaths.

If Huffman chooses to wear the necklace and wins the Oscar, the curse theory could vanish.

Petimezas said black diamonds are rare. Only one of every 10,000 diamonds that are mined has color.

“It’s not the largest black diamond in the world, but it is the most famous,” the jeweler said.

Perhaps it also is the most infamous.

Known as the Black Orlov, or “The Eye of Brahma,” the jewel is haunted by a curse that reportedly began when the original 195-carat diamond was removed from a Hindu shrine in southern India.

The diamond is tied to the deaths of three former owners who apparently killed themselves.

In an attempt to break the curse, the diamond was re-cut into three separate gems and since has been owned by a succession of private owners, all of whom seem to have escaped the curse.

Petimezas’ research has found no reported tragedies linked to the diamond since 1947.

The legend of the 67.5-carat Black Orlov may scare off some, but Huffman has shown her mettle in her acclaimed performance of a pre-operative transsexual – the part for which she received the Oscar nomination.

Huffman, the star of “Transamerica,” received her first Academy Award nomination for her portrayal of Bree Osbourne, who has been living successfully as a woman and is preparing for her sexual reassignment surgery.

Her chances of winning an Oscar are considered favorable because she won a Golden Globe this year for the performance.

Petimezas said the necklace was on display Thursday and today during pre-Oscar festivities at the Mondrain Hotel Penthouse, where celebrities could view more than $12 million worth of glitter provided by 25 jewelers.

The jewelry displayed in the Platinum Guild jewelry suite is intended to give celebrities an opportunity to borrow pieces for the weekend’s festivities.

The jeweler said he had no plans to attend the awards in person.

“My itinerary is full while here in L.A.,” Petimezas said.

The Black Orlov will not be difficult to spot when Huffman walks the red carpet with her husband, actor William H. Macy – who was nominated in 1996 for Best Supporting Actor for his role of Jerry Lundegaard in “Fargo.”

The black diamond is set in a 108-diamond brooch suspended from a 124-diamond necklace.

Petimezas dismisses the curse and said the necklace has brought him nothing but good luck since he purchased it more than a year ago.

“Since I have owned it,” he said, “I have married my longtime sweetheart, we have moved into our dream home and enjoyed continued growth in the diamond business.”

The stone has been on loan prior to being transported to Hollywood by an independent security firm.

The black Indian diamond was added to a show Sept. 21 at London’s Natural History Museum that featured some of the world’s most valuable diamonds.

Among the priceless treasures on display were the flawless white 203-carat Millennium Star and the Steinmetz Pink, which is graded as the finest pink diamond in the world and weighs 59.6 carats.

Call it a curse or bad luck, but the London show – which opened in July and was due to run until February – closed three months early.

The exhibit was cut short after urging from police.

“The show closed abruptly as a result of a plot uncovered by Scotland Yard of an imminent robbery,” Petimezas said.

Would Petimezas sell the Black Orlov?

“If someone would come forward and offer in excess of $2 million,” he said, “I would be inclined to let it go.”found at wikipedia.orgThe Black Orloff diamond was discovered in India in the early 1800s. It originally weighed 195 carats. It was allegedly cursed - as were all its future owners - when a monk removed the gem from the eye of the idol of Brahma at a shrine near Pondicherry, India.

At least three former owners have apparently killed themselves. In 1932, J W Paris, the diamond dealer who imported the stone to the United States, jumped to his death from one of New York’s tallest buildings shortly after concluding the sale of the jewel. And 15 years later, a pair of Russian princesses, Nadia Vyegin-Orlov and Leonila Galitsine-Bariatinsky, leapt to their deaths within a month of each other.

In an attempt to escape the curse, the diamond was re-cut into three separate stones, which have since been in the possession of a succession of private owners.

The 67.5 carat stone known today as the Black Orlov is set in a 108-diamond brooch suspended from a 124-diamond necklace. When the diamonds exhibition closes in February, the necklace will travel to California where a star, whom Petimezas refused to name, will wear it to the 2006 Oscars ceremony.

Black diamonds are very rare and get their colour from the presence of tiny mineral traces, mainly the iron-oxide minerals magnetite and haematite. Only one in 10,000 diamonds mined is coloured.

This diamond is currently owned by Dennis Petimezas, a diamond dealer from Pennsylvania, who bought it for an unspecified sum last year.