marine deposits
Marine Diamond Deposits
Marine deposits are a variation on alluvial deposits.
They result from the wave action of the ocean, which has concentrated
diamonds
at the base of the surf zone. Waves arriving at an angle to the coast
tend
to push the diamonds along the coast, causing the diamonds to stream
out
from where rivers deposited them at the coastline. Moreover, changes in
climate have led to great variations in sea level -- hence movement of
diamond concentrations to both old beaches well up on land and others
now
more than 100 meters below sea level.
There are 3 types of marine mining operations. In one, sand is moved from 10 meters below sea level to as far inland as the sea may have risen, in order to reveal the concentrations on the bedrock. In another, divers and boats work in the surf zone to perhaps 20 meters of water and use suction pipes to remove gravel and diamonds from the ocean floor. In the third, deep-sea marine vessels use remote underwater tractors or large underwater excavators to remove overlying sediments and extract the diamond-bearing sand and gravel. Processing is done on land in the first 2 cases and shipboard on the large mining vessels.
Wave refraction maps like this one for concession
2(b) along the South African coast are used to assist in locating
concentrations
of diamonds. The map shows where the wave force is maximized, and thus
where diamonds will have been concentrated by wave action. Wave power
is
transformed into the visible spectrum, so that blue represents weak and
red strong power.