The Depositing Floors

Owing to the refractory character of blue ground fresh from the mines, it has to be exposed to atmospheric influences before it will pulverise under the action of water and mechanical treatment.

From the surface-boxes, into which the blue ground is tipped when it reaches the top of the main shaft, it is transferred to side-tipping trucks and sent to the depositing floors by means of endless wire-rope haulage. The speed of the haulage varies from 2½ to 4 miles per hour. The trucks are counted automatically as they are sent to the floor by a reciprocating engine-counter placed on a frame near the tramline.

The depositing floors are prepared by removing the bush and grass from a fairly level piece of ground; this ground is then rolled smooth and hard. The floors extend over many square miles of country and are surrounded by 7-foot barbed wire fences, vigilantly guarded day and night. The De Beers floors, on Kenilworth, are laid off in rectangular sections 600 yards long and 200 yards wide, each section holding about 50,000 loads. The ground from the Kimberley Mine is the softest and only needs a few months’ exposure on the floors; the ground from De Beers is much harder and requires at least six months’ exposure, while some ground is so hard that it will not disintegrate by exposure to the weather under one or two years. The De Beers Mine contains a much larger quantity of this hard blue ground than the other mines, and in order to save the loss of time consequent on keeping an enormous stock of blue constantly on the floors, it has recently been decided to pass the harder and more refractory stuff direct from the mine through crushing mills.

For a time the blue ground remains on the floors without undergoing much alteration. But soon the heat of the sun and moisture produce a wonderful effect. Large pieces, hard as ordinary sandstone when taken from the mine, commence to crumble. At this stage the winning of the diamonds assumes more the nature of farming than mining. The ground is frequently harrowed and occasionally watered, to assist pulverisation by exposing the larger pieces to atmospheric influences. The length of time necessary for the ground to weather before it becomes sufficiently pulverised for washing depends on the season of the year and the amount of rain. The longer the ground remains exposed the better it is for washing.

FIG. 8. DE BEERS WASHING AND CONCENTRATING MACHINERY.

To face p. 48.

It is curious to note that there is a marked difference in the rapidity of disintegration of the blue ground in each of the four mines. The longer the exposure, the more complete the pulverisation and the better for washing. Under normal conditions soft blue ground becomes sufficiently pulverised in from four to six months, but it is better to expose it for a longer period, even for a whole year.