No.
Diamonds are an allotrope of carbon formed deep within the earth's mantle under extremes of high pressure and temperatures. This unique combination is what forms diamonds over millions of years.
A rock is always mineral material. Diamond is formed from carbon -- a natural, organic material. A diamond is considered both a rock and a mineral, according to these definitions.
The answer you want is based on what you consider 'best': clarity, colour, cut or carat weight. Any lab-created diamond is made from carbon and is a real, lab-created diamond. Another answer may be: the best one is the one that you can afford.
'Finest' is a judgement call, and you are the judge. Lab-created diamonds can be custom-ordered, based on the source of the carbon. You can also specify a colour of diamond that you want. Any lab-created diamond will always be a lab-created diamond, and its competitor won't be another lab-created diamond, but will be a natural diamond.
The field test for diamond is hardness. Try marking other rocks. Otherwise, carry the rock into a jeweler who can use a probe and tell you whether or not your rock is a raw diamond.
No. A diamond is a rock, a stone and requires no access to air in its work.
There are many styles of diamond rings created specifically to be worn on the right hand. Some places that one can purchase right hand diamond rings include Dazzling Rock, eBay, and Bonanza.
Diamond Rock happened in 1805.
Only Diamond is as hard as diamond, and if their could be any gem stone as hard as diamond then it would definitely be Diamond.
Most of the time, no.
The harder rock is diamond
A diamond
Diamond is not a rock, it's a mineral.
Your answer is a raw red diamond rock.
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The field test for a diamond is hardness. You can scratch another rock or a test piece of glass with the edge of the stone. Note, however, that the field test is not conclusive.
no a diamond is a gem.
Of cource another diamond! A diamond is the toughtest rock.