Diamonds May Be More Common than Previously Thought

Scientists develop new theory about simpler deep-Earth formation

Written byJohns Hopkins University
| 3 min read
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Diamonds may not be as rare as once believed, but this finding in a new Johns Hopkins University research report won't mean deep discounts at local jewelry stores.

"Diamond formation in the deep Earth, the very deep Earth, may be a more common process than we thought," said Johns Hopkins geochemist Dimitri A. Sverjensky, whose article co-written with doctoral student Fang Huang was published Tuesday in the online journal Nature Communications. The report says the results "constitute a new quantitative theory of diamond formation," but that does not mean it will be easier to find gem-quality diamonds and bring them to market.

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