FeatureGems & Gemology, Winter 2017, Vol. 53, No. 4

The Very Deep Origin of the World’s Biggest Diamonds

Evan M. Smith, Steven B. Shirey, Wuyi Wang

Rough CLIPPIR diamonds
Figure 1. Rough CLIPPIR diamonds have physical features akin to the historic Cullinan diamond, which forms the “C” of the CLIPPIR acronym. The size distribution for this variety of diamond is skewed toward large sizes, with the examples shown here ranging from 14 to 91 carats. In rough form, CLIPPIR diamonds are irregularly shaped rather than well-formed crystals and sometimes appear to be broken fragments of once larger diamonds. Photo by Robert Weldon/GIA; courtesy of Gem Diamonds Ltd.

Dr. Smith is a research scientist, and Dr. Wang is vice president of research and development, at GIA in New York. Dr. Shirey is a senior scientist in the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism of the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, DC.

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The Very Deep Origin of the World’s Biggest Diamonds | Gems & Gemology