Santa Fe New Mexican

Hope Diamond’s hellish origins

- By Ben Guarino

Before the massive Hope Diamond came to rest in a Smithsonia­n exhibit, before the gem passed among wealthy owners and thieves and French royals, before it acquired its cursed reputation, before it was mined in India, the diamond was born at hellish depths beneath Earth’s crust. Fittingly, the birth of a blue diamond like the Hope requires a complex geologic sequence, a new study published Wednesday in the journal Nature suggests.

Blue diamonds are the rarest diamonds on Earth. A recent survey of 13.8 million diamonds turned up that only 0.02 percent were blue ones. These gemstones form four times deeper in the earth than their colorless cousins, the new report indicates, at depths of at least 400 miles below the surface. That’s nearly twice as far undergroun­d as the Internatio­nal Space Station is above us.

“We always knew there was something special about these diamonds,” said geologist Jeffrey Post, curator of the mineral collection at the Smithsonia­n’s National Museum of Natural History, who was not involved with this report. The study authors make “a very compelling argument” that these diamonds formed at greater depths.

The origin of blue diamonds has long been a puzzle. “We knew essentiall­y absolutely nothing about where they grow,” said geologist Evan M. Smith, a lead author of the Nature report and a research scientist at the Gemologica­l Institute of America in New York, a nonprofit that oversees the world’s gemstone grading system.

Diamonds, you may recall, are crystals of carbon atoms. Geologists had determined that trace impurities, contaminat­ion with the element boron, turn diamonds blue. A boron atom can replace a carbon atom in the crystal structure. A loose electron from boron absorbs red light, giving the diamond a blue hue.

But that discovery only spawned more questions. Boron sticks to the surface of Earth. There should not be any boron to speak of within the interior, where diamonds grow.

To answer the question of where the boron originated, Smith and his colleagues reviewed 46 blue diamonds — including one that fetched $25 million in 2016 — that were submitted to the Gemologica­l Institute of America. (The study authors did not study the Hope Diamond itself, but Post said the gem is representa­tive of natural blue diamonds.) The Gemologica­l Institute of America has access to “more stones than any of us would have access to in our lifetime,” Post said. That river of stones passing through graders’ hands holds valuable geologic informatio­n.

Diamonds grow in rock like plants grow in soil. “When a diamond grows, sometimes it can envelop some of the surroundin­g material and trap it,” Smith said. He offered a cinematic parallel: the amber that trapped a mosquito in Jurassic Park. The carbon crystals trap other minerals that are known as inclusions.

“I was able to study those inclusions to identify the minerals and start to build up a picture of the birthplace of blue diamonds,” Smith said. Those inclusions are a physical fragment of the diamond nursery.

To gem cutters, inclusions are flaws to be carved out. To geologists, though, these are messages from the deep. “If you had to design the perfect capsule to bring something from below, a diamond would be it,” Post said.

Within the inclusions, Smith identified the remnants of calcium silicates and other minerals that only form at extreme high pressure.

An analysis of these ruptures, plus the list of minerals found in the inclusions, pointed to an unusual birthplace. It required the union of two rocks: oceanic crust from the surface and the underlying ocean mantle. That is a match made in the abyss.

This descent can also explain the wayward boron, Smith said. Boron exists in seawater. He hypothesiz­ed that the rocks in descending crust carried the boron below.

He said this study cannot prove the origin of the boron but no better theory exists.

The Smithsonia­n has acquired a few blue diamonds, mostly scraps from cut gems, it is willing to offer for study, Post said. He’s just waiting for researcher­s to propose an experiment­al design that can justify destroying some of the priciest minerals on Earth.

 ?? EVAN M. SMITH GEMOLOGICA­L INSTITUTE OF AMERICA ?? A small blue diamond with inclusions, seen as dark spots, a fragment of the diamond nursery.
EVAN M. SMITH GEMOLOGICA­L INSTITUTE OF AMERICA A small blue diamond with inclusions, seen as dark spots, a fragment of the diamond nursery.

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