Your local jeweler can help you determine whether or not the crystal coloured stone you have is a diamond or not.
You can verify a diamond by taking it to a jeweler, who can verify which stone you're using to scratch glass.
A clear (relative) crystal of Diamond what ever be the color,even black now-a-days that can be used in Jewellery or as a collectable maybe called a Gem diamond. Industrial diamond are usually opaque and dumb to look at!!
Material with low conductance such as rubber, plastics and so forth.
The answer is Bile. previously diamond was thought to be the strongest stone in the world however diamond is in fact a crystal and a new stone known as Lonsdaleite has been found to be 58% stronger
Diamond.A diamond is a crystal, and a crystal is a rock with neatly arranged atoms.
Crystal
Well if your looking for a stone that looks similar to a diamond that's not actually a diamond and is cheaper there are CZ's (Cubic zirconia) and can come in any color. There is also Swarovski Crystals, and of course you can go for natural semi-precious gemstones such as crystal quartz, and moonstone.
Pokemon crystal? Well...in Pokemon Diamond it's a stone dice that powers up rock type moves.
wood, crystal, diamond, stone, granite
Take your stone to a certified gemologist to confirm that it is a diamond. It could be a crystal stone of another type, and not a diamond. One reason why a diamond stone would appear hazy to the naked eye is because of flaws in the stone. If the stone is a diamond, it is probably not an expensive stone, given its apparent lack of clarity.
You can verify a diamond by taking it to a jeweler, who can verify which stone you're using to scratch glass.
A diamond is a mineral, but it be called a "gem stone" if you want to be fancy. Stones are usually round, and is a very broad subject. It varies from very expensive to just a regular old by-the-sidewalk stone. I would say that the best description of a diamond is a crystal.
It's state gem is the diamond and its state mineral is the quartz crystal.
A mineral crystal is not necessarily a diamond, but a diamond is a mineral crystal. All minerals, such as diamond, have crystalline structures.
there is no crystal stone
You may be able to accomplish this if you are willing to sacrifice a gemstone. In this case, you must strike the diamond at **exactly** the right spot in order to separate the diamond along its crystal plane. You may be able to accomplish this action more easily if you choose to take a stone to an industrial diamond, which has much less value than a gemstone, is flawed and lacks the more solid, extended crystal plane.
From the Web site, below, the process, which occurs in the lab: "The HPHT process...takes the diamond back to its formative environment and causes the platelets of nitrogen to be dispersed within the crystal lattice. This dispersion of nitrogen platelets into much smaller nitrogen molecules causes the off-color diamonds to take on a color of fancy yellow to yellow-green. And this allows the otherwise not-sellable-poor-color diamond to become a sellable fancy color diamond." HPHT-treated diamonds can be detected by a certified gemologist. A buyer should pay significantly less for a treated stone than for an un-treated stone. Read more, below.