7 year old makes 2.95 carat discovery at Arkansas’ Crater of Diamonds

A 7 year old girl on a birthday trip to Crater of Diamonds State Park in Arkansas found a big present a 2.95 carat diamond.

Arkansas State Parks said Aspen Brown of Paragould, Ark., was visiting the park with her family to celebrate her birthday when she spotted the diamond in the park’s north search area.

Officials said the 2.95 carat diamond is about the size of a green pea, with a golden-brown color.

The diamond is the second largest found by a park visitor this year, officials said. The largest was a 3.29 carat brown diamond found in March.

The Murfreesboro park was mined by commercial diamond hunters before becoming a state park in 1972.

Arkansas man unearths 4.49-carat gem at Crater of Diamonds

Arkansas-man-unearths-449-carat-gem-at-Crater-of-Diamonds

Steven McCool of Fayetteville, Ark., found a 4.49 carat sparkling, canary yellow diamond during his recent trip to Crater of Diamonds State Park. The discovery was the third largest diamond found at the park so far this year. Photo courtesy of Arkansas State Parks

An Arkansas man visited the state’s Crater of Diamonds State Park and discovered a 4.49 carat sparkling, canary yellow diamond the third largest diamond found in the park this year.

Steven McCool, of Fayetteville, said he had decided to spend the day at the park since recent rains had made for optimal diamond hunting conditions, and he was on his 11th sifting bucket of the day when he spotted something just 30 minutes before the park closed.

“As my eyes were panning to it, I was thinking it could be an amber piece of glass like an old Coke bottle,” McCool said. “Once I focused on it though, I knew it was a diamond. I was like ‘No way! No way!'”

McCool took his discovery to the diamond identification table, where his suspicions were proved correct.

“Mr. McCool’s find is a 4.49 carat sparkling, canary yellow diamond that is about the size of a jellybean and seems to have great clarity. It is a stunning diamond,” Crater of Diamonds State Park Assistant Superintendent Meghan Moore said.

Officials said it was the third largest discovery so far this year.

McCool dubbed his discovery the BamMam Diamond, in honor of his children’s initials.

“What’s more precious than a precious gem? My children. So, I named it after my children and the name will stay with the diamond forever,” he said.

“I called my son afterward and asked him if he remembered what Thanos’ Mind Stone looked like, and told him I found one!”

Source: upi.com