People value diamonds based on their visually engaging beauty, their emotional baggage, and their investment value.
Diamonds are rare and expensive, especially larger, high-quality stones, because they are expensive to discover, mine, cut, polish and market.
It isn't the element (carbon) that makes a diamond valuable: it's the availability of the diamond allotrope of carbon, and its limited occurrence on earth.
it formed in a formation where flourescent minerals were present and they became part of the carbon bond that makes up the diamond. it usually makes the diamond more valuable. the hope diamond is flourescent (blue?)
Diamond.
A natural diamond will always be more valuable than a lab-created diamond, given the same clarity, colour, carat weight and cut of the two comparables.
it is valuable because gold is easy to spot and it is so shiney that it makes people risk their lives just to get it
It isn't the element (carbon) that makes a diamond valuable: it's the availability of the diamond allotrope of carbon, and its limited occurrence on earth.
it formed in a formation where flourescent minerals were present and they became part of the carbon bond that makes up the diamond. it usually makes the diamond more valuable. the hope diamond is flourescent (blue?)
No.
On the 1969 S penny a doubling of the print makes it very valuable ($35 000)
Yes, if it is a gem-stone quality diamond.
Depends on the quality of the diamond in question.
Of equal weight, gem-quality diamond is more valuable than silver.
it is really valuable and is one of the hardest materials in the world. it is so hard that they use diamond saws (dont ask me how they made those) to cut diamond in to pieces.
Most valuable: Diamond Least valuable: Gravel
what makes it so valuable is because it purifies the intoxicated air. Also it produces lots of drinkable water and everyday needed products
Diamond's atomic structure makes it the hardest mineral known.
Diamonds are more valuable than coal.