Oh, dude, real diamonds on Krakatoa? That would be like finding a unicorn at a zoo. Krakatoa is a volcanic island known for its eruptions, not for being a hidden treasure trove. So, no, you won't find real diamonds there, but hey, maybe you'll stumble upon some volcanic rock that kind of looks like a diamond if you squint hard enough.
no it does not
In the 1948 novel by William Pène du Bois, named The Twenty-One Balloons, his protagonist "...discovers that the island [of Krakatoa] is populated by twenty families sharing the wealth of a secret diamond mine - by far the richest in the world - which they operate as a cartel." This is a work of fiction. Although diamonds erupt to the earth's surface by way of volcanic action, there is no proof that there are diamonds involved in the volcanic action of Krakatoa.
Kiran diamonds are manufactured diamonds: real, manufactured diamonds.
Chemically they are real diamonds.
Real diamonds can be found in Arkansas.
Are 3.60 dwt diamonds real
Yes.
Black diamonds -- properly Carbonado, are real diamonds, with our without enhancements. You can read more about Carbonado, below.
There are "Russian diamonds" - is the company/website name and it offer diamond simulants, not real diamonds. And there are Russian diamonds which is produced in Russian labs which are 100% real diamonds. To ensure the diamond is real ask for independent gemology certificate: GIA, EGL, IGI.
Lindenwold CZ diamonds are cubic zirconia, formed from zirconium dioxide. diamonds are formed from carbon. Directly, Lindenwold CZ diamonds are real CZ diamonds.
How can we not run out of diamonds. That is the real questions.
Synthetic diamonds and real diamonds both have the same level of hardness. They both rank 10 on the Mohs scale of hardness.