Where to find diamonds, How to identify rough diamonds and how to recover raw diamond crystals

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hi I'm Chris Ralph the professional prospector it and today we're gonna talk about diamonds pretty exciting huh really valuable stuff now have you ever wondered if you might have found something pretty clear Rock something maybe it was a diamond well we're gonna talk about what raw untreated natural diamond crystals look like we're gonna talk about where diamonds might be found and how you might identify them now if you've ever been interested in looking for diamonds you may find by listening to this video the diamonds were found in a lot more different places than you might imagine now I'm at an old gold placer mine in California and you would say well Chris if you're gonna talk about diamonds why would you be in an old gold placer mine well little-known fact in California in the early days of the gold rush there were a lot of diamonds found in certain areas of the gold country the mother lode country in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada yeah literally hundreds of diamonds were found by the prospectors when they were out mining for gold now you know most of what the old-time miners did was sluicing and stuff like that and that's a really inefficient not very good way of collecting diamonds but we're gonna talk about that now another thing that I'm gonna tell you that's gonna surprise you is you may not know but there was a commercial commercial scale full business you know commercial type of industrial skilled diamond mine in Colorado in the 1990s that's pretty amazing that a lot of you didn't know that so of course there's always the Murfreesboro diamond pit that you can go to in Arkansas and pay a fee and go hunt diamonds at an old diamond mine site we're gonna talk about all that stuff what diamonds look like how you can identify you something that you might think was a diamond and all of that so stay tuned and we're gonna dive deep into the world of diamonds so today we're gonna talk about diamond deposits and I'm gonna talk about where you can find diamonds and how to recognize rough diamonds because you know they have an unusual appearance to them and you know every little clear rock that you might find that could be a piece of glass or something else that's not a diamond necessarily alright so because you're looking for rough diamonds the first thing you need to do is to be able to recognize a rough diamond so if you go out and look for something and you have no idea what it looks like yeah how you're gonna be successful in finding them so the first order of business is the recognition of rock diamonds and then next we're gonna talk about how to recover diamonds by our diamond mining including both the gravels that have diamonds in them and then also Hard Rock mines that exist and how they work and then we're gonna talk about recovery methods including using grease like like Vaseline or something like that and then also gravity and then we're gonna talk about places to find diamonds in the USA and elsewhere you know diamonds have been found in a huge number of states in the United States that might be surprising to a lot of people but it's true and there's reasons for it and a lot of probably diamond deposits that exist in the United States that have never been discovered so we're gonna talk about that in detail at the end once you've figured out how to recognize a diamond how to recover it then we're gonna talk about places you should go so our first part recognizing rough diamonds see here's some cut diamonds and rough diamonds and you see that there's a certain shape to the the rough diamonds note the triangle shapes that's a key thing for rough diamonds now here's some drawings that have been done and the two on the left our what's called an octahedral crystal and that's the normal shape for a diamond and now it comes in other shapes to be sure but this most common shape is this octahedral shape and you can see it's kind of like two pyramids one pyramid right side up and one pyramid upside down attached to each other and then on the upper right you can see how they cut these things to produce a diamond crystal from within the octahedron you can see that most of it's used up to make a round diamond now the lower left or lower right-hand side sorry is a modified crystal where you have the basically the octahedron but it's been changed and other shapes added to it and this is pretty common in diamonds so you end up with diamonds that are somewhat rounded but still have the sign of this octahedral crystal you can still detect it from within them here's some pretty and beautifully clean octahedral diamond crystals this is what the most perfect octahedral diamonds look like but as I said sometimes you get situations where there are other faces that modify the triangular shapes of the octahedron now you can still see if you look at this you see the various triangles you see the triangular shape the one upside down and one right side up and then you see the other modifying crystals to it to this illustration also shows something really interesting that you need to remember about diamond crystals that is that they have a kind of a greasy look to them when they are perfectly clean and dry it's called an adamantine luster and that is a very unusual situation for a diamond so you will see these diamond crystals even when they're perfectly clean and dry looking a little bit as if they were you know covered with some sort of oil or grease and that's an important thing to remember another octahedral diamond crystal just turned over on its side but you can again see the various triangular shapes that all come together to make the diamond crystal a comparison of a couple of diamonds again both of them showing that kind of greasy look to them the octahedron was some rounding on the left and then the highly modified octahedron on the right that's more yellowish now one of the things you need to remember and we'll talk more about this in a minute is that not every diamond crystal in fact the vast majority are not perfectly white and clean most of them come in some sort of shade and you can see the one on the right here is a shade of yellow and that's very common in diamond crystals here's some more diamond crystals some more modified than others but in most of these you can see either you know there's some here that are pretty much perfect octahedrons but other ones that are less perfect you can still see the triangular shape to it you can certainly see the kind of greasy oily look that they have you can also see a couple of these are brown a light brown and a dark brown again like I say not all diamonds are perfectly white and clear factor most are not now diamonds sometimes come in huge sizes and a stone like this is literally worth millions and millions of dollars so if you make a diamond discovery and you find something big it could change your life again that sometimes comes in some really huge crystal sizes this is another rough diamond of huge size again would be worth millions so more rough diamonds if you look very carefully at these you can see the triangular shapes in them it's it's pretty obvious to see now here is a selection of basically non gem quality in other words less than gem quality rough diamonds that were for sale at a gem show too Sahn Arizona years ago took this picture and all of these diamonds although some of them do show the the triangular faces on them many of them are so modified and rounded that it's less than obvious but you still have that greasy luster to them and you can see these are ones that are just not not clear and the ones that are like this get used for grinding purposes there's a millions of pounds that get ground up every year for various grinding wheels and grinding surfaces and hey even nail polishing fingernail polishing there are premium grinding or filing types of items diamonds get used in lots of different things because of their extreme hardness here's a couple of more crystals and one of these things one of the things I want to point out to you is that diamonds that are much less perfect that are more like this you know these are completely opaque you couldn't make a gem out of them they tend to be more imperfect in their crystal shape too it's not just the included the cloudiness of the crystal it's also the the crystal shape is affected by the imperfections and here you can see a diamond that one part of it is a flawed and cloudy but then the part more the upper left that would be something that probably could be cut into a gemstone although it would be clearly a yellow color now I mentioned diamonds do come in a lot of colors and here's a yellow but even more common is some shade of brown and you can see in this selection these are probably from Australia because the big Argyle mine in Australia produces a lot of brown color crystals and and jewelers have actually made a a marketing pitch to try and sell these brown color crystals calling them champagne diamond and now this selection of diamonds is kind of a mixture of stuff that probably could be cut into gemstones some of them and yet others are imperfect enough that they probably would be used for abrasive purposes again I mentioned yellow fancy yellow diamonds actually have a great value and are highly appreciated but they also come in things like pink and the pink ones are highly valued and they come in blues blue stones are also highly valued if you look carefully on this though even though this is very misshapen and lumpy looking you can still see the triangular faces in this of course the most famous blue diamond is the Hope Diamond it's it was probably originally found in India and stolen and smuggled and recut and a lot of different things but it's a beautiful very large blue diamond that is of course very famous now you look at stuff like this this is there's no triangle faces the broken edges these are not crystal faces these are broken edges this is the very famous or the rough version anyway of the very famous cubic zirconia a well known diamond substitute it's it's not a diamond these are not diamonds this is rough cubic zirconia it's what cubic zirconia looks like before it's cut into a gemstone and it's a man-made thing there are traces of cubic zirconia in nature but none no crystals big enough to cut actual gemstones from but you wouldn't find something like this out in nature if you were out hunting for diamonds yeah you're not likely to come upon a man-made chunk of cubic zirconia it just not gonna happen because then somebody would had to throw it out there because it's just not this does not a natural thing this is made by scientists in a lab but the one thing that you may come across in your hunt for gemstones is what are called quartz crystals these are what are known as Herkimer diamonds it's basically a quartz crystal that's terminated on both ends so it comes to a point not just on the top but on the bottom too and these things are very pretty but they have only very small value they're not worth a lot of money and they're certainly not diamonds years ago I had a guy come to me with a quartz crystal it wasn't terminated on both ends like this it was only terminated on one end but is very clear and very pretty and of good size it was like the size of an egg and he was convinced that he had gotten a diamond worth millions and millions and it only took me like two seconds to tell him I'm sorry it's not a diamond it's a piece of quartz and instead of being worth millions it's probably worth about $10 and he just wouldn't take my answer he said no it can't be it's a diamond I'm sorry it's a piece of quartz quartz is one of the most common minerals on the Earth's surface and there are millions and millions and millions of tons of natural quartz crystals and just not that many diamonds diamonds are valuable because they're rare and they're also a lot harder than quartz and a lot more brilliant when they're cut into gemstones than quartz they're just a lot more valuable here's another doubly terminated in other words it comes to a point on both ends quartz crystal got a lot flaws in it but this is another Herkimer diamond and people do mistake quartz crystals for diamonds quite regularly here is a quartz crystal that was mistaken for a diamond it was found by a lady who was prospecting near Forest Hill in California at one of the old tertiary gravel pits and she was looking for gold but she found this little beautiful clear crystal and was convinced of course because it's a little clear crystal it must be a diamond and the truth is those old hydraulic pits in cow fornia they did yield diamonds in certain places there were there were literally hundreds of diamonds mined in California in the early days of the gold rush and we'll talk more about that later but she found this and it actually was published in the Sacramento newspaper and got widespread notoriety but I'm sorry I can look at this in just a second and tell you by the crystal shape by the lack of the triangles by the lack of the greasy luster and by just its shape in general that it's a little piece of quartz probably not worth twenty-five cents but if it were a diamond do be worth thousands of dollars but I hope that when you go out and you do your search for diamonds you'll learn I've learned from this video what real diamonds look like and that you won't get stuck mistaking a piece of quartz for a diamond okay so in our next part we're gonna talk about mining and recovering diamonds you can see here a a couple of little handfuls of these are natural diamonds they really are but you can see by looking at it most of these are not gem quality but still they're real diamonds now most people think of mining for diamonds as some kind of jargon turq open-pit mine which this is a very large diamond mine this is the Argyle mine in West Africa I'm sorry West Australia and in kind of Northwest Australia and this is one of the largest diamond producing mines in the world now I mentioned earlier that it tends to produce it does produce some beautiful clear colorless diamonds and and some other colored diamonds that are attractive but it tends to produce more than an average amount of brown diamonds which like I say have been specially marketed by jewelers as some sort of special deal champagne diamonds because of course champagne is a lot better seller than Wow okay but this is a big diamond mine that's what most people think of here's another I'm in mind this one happens to be in Russia Russia mine's quite a few diamonds they actually happen to have quite a bit of diamond deposits in Russia this is a big open pit diamond mine in Africa and so you can see again the the standard open pit type of mining they mine all this rock they blow it up and break it into small sizes like you can see the excavator digging in and they put it in trucks and haul it off and and process the rock to extract the diamonds out of it now one of the things I want to say about diamonds and most of people know that the the rock that the most common rock that has diamonds is called kimberlite and that actually comes from an explosion from deep within the earth literally builds up so much pressure down in the earth and there's a little weak point or something that material explodes up to the surface from these deposits and you'd think that well okay then you get a lot of chunks of this and that and the other thing in kimberlite and sure enough we're gonna see that but this is also why it's called a kimberlite pipe which is another descriptor for the type of deposit is a kimberlite pipe because it's a long tall deep deposit that goes way down into the earth here is a diamond actually surrounded by its host rock the kimberlite rock the very dark-colored rock here's another diamond beautiful octahedral crystal you can see the triangles and it's in a dark-colored kimberlite rock that's the host for it another example of a diamond in the host rock this one you can see has been river rounded this is a river pebble that had a diamond sticking out of it remember that when you're out searching for diamonds some more kimberlite with a diamond in it this one's harder to see the triangle faces but if you were there and taking a closer look you'd be able to see it now you can see that the rock is not uniform it looks like it's made of bits and pieces and chunks of other rock within it and that's due to the explosive power of the kimberlite pipe that it brings up all kinds of other rocks with it as it explodes upwards this is another piece of kimberlite this is one that doesn't have an obvious visible diamond showing it's just to show this rock kimberlite and how it's made of a bunch of chunks of different kinds of rock that were basically brought up with it as it exploded upward now we showed you big giant pits and large-scale mining with trucks and excavators and all but actually a significant part of diamonds that are produced in the world are produced by small operators and these are African folks and Families out mining diamonds in a little pit and you know they don't make a huge amount of money doing this but they're very poor and they eke out a living doing this again another area where they're digging down and mining diamonds and eking out a living you know one of the things that you need to know something about is what they call conflict diamonds or blood diamonds and basically it's a lot of little operations like this are controlled by you know local area dictators or you know jefes leaders that are in control and sometimes the money that they get from the operations of these guys are used for violent or war type purposes and that's how their the conflict diamonds are called conflict or war diamonds that's another term but what happens is is that it's not like these individual guys in this picture are you know mining their diamonds and saying oh I want to use this diamond for violence of course not they're just trying got enough money so they can buy some food and and buy clothes and keep their family fed and and that kind of stuff and they have to it as a matter of practice there's not really an option they have to sell their diamonds to somebody and sometimes it goes through two or three hands and one of the hands maybe though the warlord before it gets to somebody who might cut a diamond and make jewelry out of it and the problem with the the it's what's called the Kimberley process of labeling diamonds from certain countries it's not like the the inspectors go out and talk to every miner and say hey are you selling your diamonds for violent purposes or are you trying to be peaceful no of course not it's that's you know could never be done so what happens is is that there's some bureaucratic group that just saved labels huh all the diamonds from this country are considered violent diamonds so any diamonds that's produced by anybody in this country is a conflict diamond and can't be solved and and what happens is they're really the only people that suffer are the individual guys like this because you know they're their product gets sold for less money because what happens is let's be honest diamonds are worth a lot of money and so you have a place like this let's say it's in a country that is restricted because the diamonds produced here are considered conflict diamonds you know what happens is the diamond set value they get smuggled they get sold they get you know falsified papers and being by the time they get to Antwerp or Europe or New York or something now they're perfectly clean and not conflict diamonds it's not like you know they mined the conflict diamond somebody says no and so they just throw them back on the ground of course not so you know it's it's a system that really in all honesty it's a system where big mining companies use a bureaucratic UN process to keep their foot on the necks of small miners like this and that's the truth now these guys mine and like I say most of the diamonds they produce or not gem quality but some are and it's kind of a gambling thing you know they might produce a few diamonds that are worth a year's wages or two years wages they're five years wages or they might produce a few diamonds that are just not worth that much money but it's a gamble for them and the most many of the times it does pay off sometimes again more situations where people are digging through the gravels these diamonds are diamonds that are not in the original hardrock kimberlite or other type of rock that hosts the diamonds but it's been eroded away the original Hard Rock deposit has been eroded away and the diamonds because they're durable and hard and last they've been washed into gravels and these gravels are what the small-scale miners work and you know it's not just desert areas it's jungle areas and these people work using very primitive methods and actually their recovery rate for the diamonds is not really that great diamonds are a little heavier than average rock and so you know they the diamonds are a little heavier than average rock so they can be caught and grab gravity based systems but they don't work really grabbing based systems are not that great here's a miner in Brazil using a sluice box to process gravels that contain diamonds and they'd use use this sluice box and like I say they do recover some diamonds but you know not that not that it's not a hundred percent it's not even probably 80 percent it's maybe poor more like 60 or 70 percent of the diamonds and the other percentage just goes into the tailings now when you're out hunting for diamonds you can use a sluice box like this to recover diamonds and you will get some diamonds if you're processing gravel that has diamonds in it a more common type of thing is to use what's a base a plate a flat sheet of aluminum or steel or something and cover it with a thin coat of Vaseline you know there's things that are like Vaseline but that also work but Vaseline is is a common one and because it's an oily type thing and diamonds have this oily exterior and the Diamonds don't let they don't wet easily so they tend to basically stay dry even when they're underwater and when they come in contact with something like this thin coating of Vaseline they stick to it and this is the process that a lot of the big commercial diamond miners use is this this ability to stick to a greasy kind of a surface that that's what they use to capture diamonds and this is a little diamond from the Midwest United States captured by a guy who was looking for gold and diamonds and processed a lot of gravel and sure enough he caught a diamond now this is not really a nice gem quality diamond but it proves in the Midwest in Midwest gold-bearing gravel there's diamonds in there too we'll talk a lot more about that in a few minutes but now you've had a chance to see how diamonds are mined and we'll talk we've talked a little bit about how they were recovered either by gravity type systems by sluice boxes or panning or much better by inserting one of these sheets of flat material covered with some sort of grease like a diamond and and then I'm sorry we've got grease like Vaseline and then you can basically combine this where you have the material goes over this and it goes over the riffles of a sluice box to better improve your diamond capturing ability and I hope you'll have success like this when you're out prospecting for diamonds so now let's talk about where you should go to look for diamonds because there are diamonds all over the US and and in a lot of other places around the world too we're gonna talk about that right now well now we're finally to the part that most people I think were itching to get to the part of where can you find diamonds and well it's a lot more States than you might think in the u.s. anyway I've highlighted all the states which have basically verified Diamond finds in them at one place or another in yellow here and you can see it's a large percentage of the US states have had significant diamond finds and you'll note that there have been a good number in the Appalachian region in the western region and in the Great Lakes region now in the western rule a region it's related to some deep faulting and there's a number of places in California that we're going to talk about in just a minute and in the central Midwest to the northern part of the Midwest the Great Lakes region the diamonds are associated with glacial materials that have been brought down during the ice ages from Canada because Canada is actually where the real source of most of the diamonds are and you can see I've drawn on the line here the line of how far the glaciation extended southward during the last ice age and pushed material far and it's associated with the edges of those where there's been erosion and basically the glacier material is very low-grade but as streams or other waterways cut through it they concentrate the diamonds and heavy minerals and these are actually places where you can also find gold in these states Gold has come along down with the glaciers from Canada as well and so searching for gold is searching for diamonds too in these states the Appalachian regions there are some areas that are known producers of diamonds and a number of placer diamonds have been found over the years but perhaps we could continue to Canada and I can show you that in the northern states and in in into Canada there's just been a huge amount of diamond exploration in the last 20 or 30 years 40 or 50 years ago basically there were no known goat diamond bearing kimberlites in Canada and yet now there's all kinds of them that have been found and it's owes to the fact that we've gotten a lot better about exploring for diamond deposits in addition there's been new diamond deposits found in the northern tier of the US as well but perhaps in the US the most famous location for exploring bird diamonds is at Murfreesboro Arkansas at the Crater of Diamonds State Park located just a little bit south of town this is a site of an old diamond deposit an unknown diamond area that has produced many thousands of diamonds there was actually a diamond mine here for a few years but it wasn't very profitable just because there wasn't enough diamonds to to out to make the whole operation profitable but there's still quite a few diamonds there and it's a state park and they allow you for a fee to come and search the grounds and you can keep whatever minerals you might find be it diamonds or anything else but there are some nice diamonds found and indeed this is a diamond that was found there not too long ago that's almost 9 carats isn't that amazing here's one that was found even more recently and it's a little over 3 carats you can see the triangular side faces on this piece this is a brown diamond crystal but still quite beautiful now one of the things that's been discovered in the last well 3040 years thirty years plus has been the presence of diamonds and kimberlites in Wyoming and then just south of the state line into Colorado there's been a lot of exploration and there are reported a number of reported diamond placer some of the passers where diamonds have been found placer mining is people out looking for old and they pan or dredge or do whatever in their search for gold and end up finding diamonds so there's a number of places in Wyoming that have been reported and here's some diamonds from Wyoming now you can see that most of them are on the brown side but still they're very beautiful you can see if you look at them carefully the triangular crystal faces now the one on the upper left is a cube that's another shape for diamonds it's not nearly as common but diamonds do come in cube shapes too sometimes it's like I say not the most common the most common is either the octahedron or some derivation some modification of the octahedron so some diamonds from Wyoming here's some diamonds from just across the state line you see that the main part of diamonds in Wyoming is right down at the south part of Wyoming almost to the Colorado state line and of course geology doesn't no state boundaries it just continues across and south of the state boundary into Colorado is a series of kimberlites that have diamonds in them as well and in fact in the 1990s there was a commercial scale a full commercial operation diamond mine in Colorado that produced for several years again the the amount of diamonds wasn't quite enough for them to make a full profit and eventually they went out of business but the Kelsey Lake diamond area is still there in Colorado and it was the site of active mining one of the most unusual ones that people don't think of is diamonds in California and as I said at the beginning of this video that a number of placer mines in in California produced a surprising number of diamonds there's two diamonds that were found in the early days and this is very old pictures from a very old book a book more than a hundred years old but one on the left is diamond found at volcano in Amador County and the one on the right rough diamond found at the Spring Creek hydraulic mine at Cherokee in Butte County and actually Butte and Amador counties were the two most productive counties in state of California although diamonds were found scattered here and there a number of diamonds were found not far from Placerville in in Placer County so don't forget about the California diamonds and again these were found as a part of processing gravels in the search for gold like I say the the best of California's diamonds the most have come from Mutiny Amador was some from Plumas and some from Placer County as well here's a little map that shows where the Cherokee or Sur Spring Valley mine is located just north of Auroville in in Butte County it's a few miles north of Oregon not far from Auroville reservoir a part of the this map is now inundated by Oroville reservoir but the Cherokee mine site is not inundated it sits above the water line now in the last 30 years or more there's been huge number of diamonds found in Canada and Canada has gone from a place where nobody knew of any diamond deposits in place to being a major producer of diamonds and diamonds have been found in many of the provinces of Canada and so a little bit of research will show you that diamonds are quite prominent in Canada now diamonds honestly are found worldwide and the major diamond diamond producing countries of the world in Coos Botswana Russia South Africa Angola and Namibia those are all other than Russia those are African countries and there's quite a bit of diamonds mined in Africa but not everywhere also Australia Republic of Congo again in Africa and then Canada so but there are also in the past of the world's big producers of diamonds have included Brazil and and centuries ago India was the biggest producer of diamonds so diamonds have been found in many many places and there are a number of countries where it's mined my hand on a small scale as I've shown you in the videos it really is an interesting place I've been into West Africa myself looking for golden and seen some diamonds that some of the miners there had found as a part of their search for gold and anyway the search for gold and diamonds are definitely related now one of the things that I want to stress to you is that I've mentioned a lot of different places in various states in various provinces and permission may be needed just because I mentioned that diamonds are there doesn't mean that you have permission to go on private property or any other property that may be there that might have diamonds and the status of property changes from time to time people sell properties and new properties come and so I'm not tried to you know do a research project to figure out access for all these places you may find some particular place you're interested and want to explore you'll need to do your own research and determine the land status and come up with any permissions that you might need so I hope you enjoyed my presentation today on diamonds and I hope that maybe you've learned something about where diamonds are found how diamonds form deep deep in the earth originally but you know it always has to be something that brings them up to the surface I hope that it's been educational for you and when you're out in the field you'll feel more knowledgeable that you'll know that if you come across a diamond unexpectedly well you'll be ready to identify it so if you want to be a better prospector if that's if that's your goal overall goal is to be better at finding gold finding diamonds gemstones and all kinds of things like that well I wrote a book called Fistful of gold and it will tell you all you need to know about prospecting and geology and related stuff and I'm gonna tell you a little bit more about it right now okay so I wanted to tell you a little bit more about my book I wanted to be able to share the knowledge that I've gained about finding gold and and how to be successful and so I spent years literally writing this book Fistful of gold it's more than 350 pages long and which is why I say it's an encyclopedia of everything you need to know about finding your own gold I've sold more than eight thousand copies and I've got a lot of really great feedback on it it just is the most complete book on the market it has information about finding gold that literally is not available in any other book that you're gonna find for prospectors because I took technical stuff from geologists and other mineral scientists and I've translated that in to language that the average guy can understand you don't need a PhD to go out and find gold but the information that scientists have learned over recent decades can can be of a lot of help to people so it's in this book if you're interested about finding gold panning sluicing nugget detecting a dry washing the geology of gold deposits and how they form it's all in here and like I say it's more than 350 pages long so if you'll just go to the description underneath this video you can take a look I've got a link in there to take you to Amazon to the site where the book is sold and I think you'll you'll really enjoy it take a look at all the people who've commented on this and have really liked the book it has a very very high rating for a book and also I have a website my own free website that you can take a look at I've got all kinds of information on here about doing research and how to find gold a lot of good information stuff that basically couldn't fit into my book and so I put it on this website and I have a link also for that in the video description so take a look in the description and you can click on the link and it'll take you to my website and finally if you like this presentation I've got a lot more coming out here's a three and a half ounces of gold that I found a couple years back in one area I've got a lot more of these videos coming on gold gemstones hardrock placer a lot of metal detecting there'll be lots of metal detecting stuff so if you really enjoyed this click the subscribe button and then take the notification bell off and YouTube will let you know when I publish new stuff and hit the like button as well and please comment on these videos because I'm interested in what you have to say and I promise to answer any questions you have so if you are wondering about anything you're thinking maybe I didn't cover something thoroughly enough in a video then let me know and I'll be happy to try and help you out and give you whatever information you need so thanks a lot and I hope you enjoyed this and we'll see you again real soon
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Channel: Chris Ralph, Professional Prospector
Views: 1,719,149
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Where to find diamonds, identify rough diamonds, recognize raw diamonds, recover rough diamonds
Id: pcNXLtzOi7I
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 43min 30sec (2610 seconds)
Published: Thu Nov 07 2019
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