indicator minerals
Indicator Minerals for Diamonds

Certain
minerals are present in the rocks from the upper mantle that occur with
diamonds in kimberlite and lamproite pipes, as seen in nearby cases of
xenoliths and diamond inclusions. Some of these minerals, being
resistant
to weathering and denser than quartz sand, concentrate in channel
bottoms.
Because they occur in far greater abundance than diamond, exploration
geologists
look for these "indicators" among the gravel of regions they suspect
may
host diamond-bearing pipes.
Indicator minerals for diamond include, in order
of decreasing significance: garnet, chromite, ilmenite, clinopyroxene,
olivine, and zircon. But the order of persistence in streams is zircon,
ilmenite, chromite, garnet, chromian diopside, and olivine. Diamond
itself
is obviously a most important indicator.
Most indicator minerals have a distinctive color.
Seen here are red pyrope garnets, green chromian clinopyroxene, black
ilmenite
and chromite, and yellowish-green olivine.