Difference between revisions of "File:Harrisson H4 Diamond Pallets.jpeg"

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== Summary ==
 
== Summary ==
 
Diamond endstones were said to give the chronometers the precision and longevity needed to keep time. The diamond's in the 18th century chronometers most likely produced through colonial extraction in Brazil reliant on slave labor. By the 19th century the diamond's most likely extracted from the Big Hole in Kimberley South Africa, an underground open mine dug by hand by 10,000 Black workers who dug the Big Hole and laboured to extract diamonds from the volcanic rock.
 
Diamond endstones were said to give the chronometers the precision and longevity needed to keep time. The diamond's in the 18th century chronometers most likely produced through colonial extraction in Brazil reliant on slave labor. By the 19th century the diamond's most likely extracted from the Big Hole in Kimberley South Africa, an underground open mine dug by hand by 10,000 Black workers who dug the Big Hole and laboured to extract diamonds from the volcanic rock.
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[[Category:Instruments]]

Revision as of 04:00, 17 April 2022

Summary

Diamond endstones were said to give the chronometers the precision and longevity needed to keep time. The diamond's in the 18th century chronometers most likely produced through colonial extraction in Brazil reliant on slave labor. By the 19th century the diamond's most likely extracted from the Big Hole in Kimberley South Africa, an underground open mine dug by hand by 10,000 Black workers who dug the Big Hole and laboured to extract diamonds from the volcanic rock.

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current03:42, 17 April 2022Thumbnail for version as of 03:42, 17 April 20221,600 × 1,215 (163 KB)CritterCompiler (talk | contribs)Diamond endstones were said to give the chronometers the precision and longevity needed to keep time

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