Sunday, December 26, 2021

ALROSA names diamond after folklore heroine to honor indigenous culture

MINING.com Editor | December 22, 2021 | Russia and Central Asia Diamond

ALROSA announced Wednesday it has given a newly mined yellow-brown 91.86-carat diamond the name Kyndykan in honour of a folklore heroine.


Kyndykan was a young girl who was miraculously found alive 200 years ago by Yakut hunters near the Verkhoyansk Mountains in an ancestral settlement completely wiped out by smallpox, ALROSA said in a media release.

Kyndykan has become a symbol of the resilience, spiritual strength and unique values of the Indigenous peoples of the Far North. The story inspired the Russian diamond miner to create a project also named Kyndykan, which aims to draw attention globally to the problem of preserving the traditions and culture of the indigenous peoples.

The Kyndykan diamond has a yellow-brown colour and measures 25х16х22 mm. It was mined in 2021 at one of the alluvial diamond deposits at Diamonds of Anabar, a subsidiary of ALROSAwhich operates across the Arctic territory of Yakutia. The indigenous peoples of the North traditionally inhabited this region. The diamond was found in the Olenyok district, one of the coldest regions in the northern hemisphere.

ALROSA said this is latest step in the company’s efforts to preserve the historical values of the indigenous peoples of Yakutia.

“At ALROSA, we have a great tradition of giving names to newly mined diamonds. On this occasion, we decided to name a diamond mined in the Far North in honour of the little Even heroine Kyndykan and after a wonderful project, which is doing a lot to ensure that voices of Indigenous peoples of the North are heard,” deputy CEO Evgeny Agureev, said in the statement.

“ALROSA has always admired their resilience and strength of character, rich history and age-old traditions. Our common goal is to preserve all of this for future generations and to tell this story to the world.”

The Top 10 diamond stories of 2021

Alisha Hiyate - the Canadian Mining Journal | December 24, 2021 |

Image from Star Diamond Corp
The diamond sector may be a volatile industry, as its dramatic ups and downs during the pandemic have demonstrated. But readers have remained interested in diamond news this year — especially when it involves large gem diamonds.


1) Over 3,000 diamonds recovered from Star-Orion South project in Saskatchewan

MINING.COM’s top diamond story of the year was actually published at the end of 2020. The story updated the findings of a bulk sample Rio Tinto (NYSE: RIO; ASX: RIO; LSE: RIO) completed in 2019 at Star Diamond’s (TSX: DIAM) Star-Orion project in Saskatchewan. At the time, the ninth of ten bulk cutter sample holes at the project had returned 3,534 diamonds weighing 210.68 carats. The haul included 10.13, 8.10 and 7.29-carat Type IIa diamonds, while 25 diamonds were greater than 1 carat. Processing from all holes has since been completed. Ownership of the Star-Orion project – called FalCon by Rio Tinto – is currently disputed, with Rio Tinto claiming a 40% stake and Star Diamond taking the major to court to argue that the terms of their 2017 earn-in agreement have not been met.

2) One of only four 1,000 carat-plus diamonds ever found dug up in Botswana

The Jwaneng open pit diamond mine in Botswana. Credit: Debswana

Second on our list is an item on an exceptional diamond — a 1.098-carat stone recovered at the Jwaneng open pit mine in Botswana. The mega-diamond is one of only four 1,000-plus carat diamonds ever unearthed. Jwaneng, the world’s richest mine by value, is owned by Debswana, a joint venture of De Beers and the Botswana government. The mine is in the middle of a $2-billion expansion to begin underground mining. The underground mine is expected to deliver as much as 9 million carats per year and extend Jwaneng’s mine life by 20 years.

3) Lucara kicks off 2021 with 341-carat white diamond find

The 341-carat diamond recovered from the Karowe mine. Credit: CNW Group/Lucara Diamond Corp.

The year’s third most read diamond story was about Canadian miner Lucara Diamond’s (TSX: LUC) first big diamond of the year. Lucara’s Karowe mine in Botswana is known for large, high-value gem diamonds, including the 341-carat unbroken white stone it recovered in January. The diamond was the 54th stone over 200 carats recovered at Karowe since it began commercial production in 2012. One analyst estimated the diamond could sell for more than $10 million.

4) Petra finds 39-carat blue diamond at Cullinan mine

The 39.34-carat blue diamond. Credit: Petra Diamonds

There’s something fascinating about coloured diamonds, which made this story about Petra Diamonds’ (LSE: PDL) discovery of a 39.34-carat blue diamond from its Cullinan mine one of MDC’s top diamond stories this year. The Type IIb gem was said to be of “exceptional quality” due to both its colour and clarity. Cullinan, located in South Africa, is known as the world’s most important source of blue diamonds.

Despite holding the unique asset, as well as two others in South Africa and one in Tanzania, Petra’s financial position is weak. The miner put itself up for sale last year and then reversed its decision in favour of a debt-to-equity restructuring. The company also faces human rights abuse allegations at its Williamson mine in Tanzania resulting from the actions of its security guards.

5) Lucara strikes again with 378 carat diamond at Karowe

The unbroken Type IIa 378 ct gem quality top white diamond was recently recovered from milling of ore sourced from the M/PK(S) unit of Karowe’s South Lobe. Credit: Lucara Diamond

No. 5 on the list detailed a second large diamond recovered from Lucara Diamond’s (TSX: LUC) Karowe mine in January. The miner reported it found a 378-carat, white unbroken gem-quality stone in the same unit – M/PK(S) — of the mine’s South Lobe where the earlier diamond was discovered. Both gems were recovered from the coarse X-ray transmission circuit that Lucara has credited with avoiding breakage of its large diamonds.

Lucara recently approved an underground expansion of Karowe that will extend the project’s mine life to at least 2040.

6) WATCH: Thousands rush to dig for diamonds in South Africa

New diamond discoveries are always exciting, and in June, word emerged of a diamond rush attracting thousands of people to an area near Ladysmith, about 360 km southeast of Johannesburg in South Africa. With videos on social media capturing crowds digging in the ground, the provincial KwaZulu-Natal government expressed concerns about crowds gathering during the pandemic and fears a stampede could occur.

Unfortunately, the find, in one of South Africa’s poorest regions that has been hard-struck by the Covid-19 pandemic, turned out to be not diamonds but quartz crystals.

7) Barrick’s Bristow to buy diamond miner

Barrick Gold (TSX: ABX; NYSE: GOLD) president and CEO Mark Bristow’s interest in troubled junior Rockwell Diamonds made this story the next most popular with readers. In January, Rockwell announced it had made a deal to delist and merge with a B.C. diamond company (Bristco) wholly owned by Bristow.

Bristow, the founder and owner of Randgold Resources (which was acquired by Barrick in 2018), acted as Rockwell’s CEO for six months to May 2011 and later joined the board. At the time of the news, he held about 2.4% of the JSE-listed diamond company.

Rockwell had been in liquidation since the end of 2016 and was awaiting final liquidation proceedings in 2021.

8) Lucapa kicks off 2021 with 113-carat diamond find at Lulo

113 carat gem-quality white Lulo diamond. Credit: Lucapa Diamond

At eighth place was another big diamond story, this time a 113-carat gem-quality diamond recovered from Lucapa Diamond’s (ASX: LOM) Lulo mine in Angola in January. Lucapa noted the diamond is the first found at Mining Block 46, downstream of the Canguige river. The stone is the seventeenth diamond over 100 carats found at Lulo, an alluvial diamond project held 40% by Lucapa. The rest is held by Angola’s national diamond company (Endiama) and Rosas & Petalas, a private entity. Lulo hosts the world’s highest dollar-per-carat alluvials diamonds.

9) Petra puts “exceptional” 39-carat blue diamond up for sale

Making a return appearance at Spot No. 9 is Petra Diamonds’ 39.34-carat blue diamond. The June 1 story noted that the diamond, recovered in January, would be sold in a special tender in July, with viewings beginning mid-June in Antwerp, Dubai, Hong Kong and New York.

The diamond, whose quality Petra described as “exceptional” in terms of both colour and clarity, was subsequently sold for $40.2 million.

10) Elite diamond-buying club shrinks as De Beers culls old clients

Bucking the trend of big diamond stories, the last story on our list was a Bloomberg news story reporting on a change in the way De Beers – the world’s largest diamond miner – does business. The item from January explained that some of the company’s buyers or sightholders have lost that status, while others have had their status downgraded. The Bloomberg piece said the changes were designed to “funnel more stones into fewer hands” and to the buyers that could add the most value to the rough diamonds.

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