No, but the element silicon is a major component of the mineral quartz, which is one of the most abundant minerals on earth.
Silicate minerals are the most abundant class of minerals on Earth. They are composed of silicon and oxygen atoms, and form the majority of the Earth's crust. Examples include quartz, feldspar, and mica.
The continent with several countries involved in mining diamonds is Africa. Absolutely, you can find the most plentiful amount of diamonds in the earth.
Plentiful. It is unlimited. However, it could also be scarce cause it takes a wile for minerals to form. But not millions of years, but more on the line of hundreds of years cause the earth isn't that old.
All diamonds are erupted to the earth surface together with indicator minerals, including kimberlite. Other minerals are present in fertile kimberlite -- containing diamonds -- and absent in sterile kimberlite.
Diamonds are found on earth by geologists who look for indicator minerals, including kimberlite and lamproite, which with diamonds, are all forced to the earth's surface in volcanic pipes. You can read more about indicator minerals, below.
Diamonds share the property of being a naturally occurring crystalline solid with a definite chemical composition, as all minerals have. Additionally, diamonds are formed in the Earth's mantle under high pressure and temperature, which is a common process for many minerals.
The most plentiful liquid solution on Earth is seawater. It was formed through a combination of processes including the erosion of rocks releasing minerals and salts into water bodies, volcanic activity releasing minerals and gases into the oceans, and the accumulation of salts from rivers and streams flowing into the oceans over millions of years.
One characteristic diamonds share with other minerals is that they are naturally occurring and formed in the Earth's crust. Additionally, like other minerals, diamonds have a specific chemical composition and crystalline structure that defines their unique properties.
Saline is the most plentiful liquid solution on Earth
The original source for diamonds is carbon. They are formed by reaction of the high temperature and pressure in the Earth's mantle on minerals containing carbon.
Prospectors in search of diamonds require either title to the land, or permission from the land owner to prospect for diamonds. Diamond pipes are discovered by geologists trained to identify trace minerals that are blasted to the earth's surface, sometimes with diamonds. You can read more about pipes and trace minerals, below.
Diamonds are found in kimberlite and lamproite rocks, which are formed deep within the Earth's mantle and brought to the surface through volcanic activity. These rocks can sometimes contain diamonds as inclusions or as separate crystals.