Gems & Jewellery News

Diamonds have a unique ‘fingerprint’ that can reveal their origins and tell you if you’ve bought the real deal

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A man walks into a pawnshop and buys a diamond. 

Years later he gets it tested to see if it’s the real deal and finds he has hit the jackpot.

Bingo! His diamond is an unmarked pink from Australia’s famous Argyle mine and worth upwards of $50,000.

A man, wearing glasses, a red jumper, and white-collared shirt, smiles.
People around the world send diamonds to John Chapman for testing.(Supplied: John Chapman)

Scientist John Chapman tested the diamond in question in his laboratory in Perth last year.

The former Argyle physicist recently set up a small lab that tests diamonds and traces them back to their original source.

“[We are] looking for particular emissions from the stones that uniquely identify them as being Argyle,” Mr Chapman says.

“We have techniques using, for example, two different lasers.

“My bread and butter is people bringing stones, which they’ve either bought before or [are] like that man who bought one from a Cash Converters, or some such place, a couple of years ago and suspected it was [an Argyle].

“And indeed it was.”

Diamonds under a laser light in a lab.
Diamonds under lasers in a lab.(Supplied: John Chapman)

Smaller, stray diamonds uncertified

In the jewellery business, spotting a real diamond from a fake is crucial and customers are keen to know the provenance of what they are buying.

When Argyle first began mining diamonds in Western Australia’s east Kimberley in 1985, it certified and inscribed only the bigger stones that were over half a carat.

That was the case for more than three decades until 2016 when the value of pink diamonds soared.

The mine then began certifying pink stones as small as 0.08 carats or about 2.75 millimetres round.

A group of vivid pink, red and violet stones against blue backdrop
The world’s largest supplier of pink and coloured diamonds will stop production at the end of today.(Supplied: Rio Tinto Diamonds.)

Mr Chapman suspects there are more stray, unauthenticated Argyle diamonds in the market.

“There are a lot of diamonds out there that hadn’t received an Argyle certificate when they were sold by virtue of the fact that the size wasn’t big enough or that it went through a different channel,” he says.

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