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Encyclopedia > HMS Diamond

Several ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Diamond. The Royal Navy of the United Kingdom is the oldest of the British armed services (and is therefore the Senior Service). ...

  • Diamond, a 50-gun ship launched at Deptford in 1652 and captured by France in 1693.
  • Diamond, a fifth-rate 50 gun ship launched at Blackwall in 1708 and rebuilt at Depford in 1722, sold in 1744.
  • Diamond, a fifth-rate launched at Limehouse in 1741 and sold in 1756.
  • Diamond, a fifth-rate launched at Hull in 1774 and sold in 1784.
  • HMS Diamond, a fifth-rate launched at Depford in 1794 and broken up in 1812.
  • HMS Diamond, a fifth-rate launched at Chatham in 1816 and broken up following a serious fire at Portsmouth in 1827.
  • HMS Diamond, a sixth-rate frigate launched in 1848. She was used as a training ship and renamed Joseph Straker between 1866 and 1868, and sold in 1885.
  • HMS Diamond, a 14-gun screw corvette launched in 1874 and sold in 1889.
  • HMS Diamond, a Gem-class cruiser built by Cammell Laird, launched in 1904 and scrapped in 1921
  • HMS Diamond, a D class destroyer launched in 1931 and lost in action in 1941.
  • HMS Diamond, a Daring class destroyer launched in 1950 and sold in 1980.
  • HMS Diamond, a Type 45 destroyer which began construction in 2005 and is expected to be launched in 2008.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Historical Encyclopedia of WA - WA Snapshots (9969 words)
It was not until 1976 that the first significant diamond discovery was made at Ellendale, 140 kilometres east of Derby in the Kimberley, where exploration revealed approximately fifty diamond pipes, but they too were considered to be uneconomic for a mining operation to be established.
The delay in diamonds being discovered in WA was due in part to their atypical occurrence within lamproite rock rather than kimberlite geological formations as found elsewhere.
Mining of the main Argyle diamond pipe began in 1985 and has proven to be the most prolific source of diamonds in the world, although the majority are of an industrial rather than gem quality grade.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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