Alberta Diamond Occurrences Dataset
The first clue to the presence of possible diamond-bearing source rocks in northern Alberta was the discovery of a perfect octahedral diamond, estimated at about 0.83 carats in weight, by farm worker Einar Opdahl during 1958 in the Evansburg area of west-central Alberta. Since the Opdahl diamond, no new diamond finds were reported in northern Alberta until the 1990s, when several occurrences of alluvial diamond and diamondiferous kimberlite were discovered.
Made available by the Government of Alberta
These resources are not under the control of the Government of Canada and the link is provided solely for the convenience of our website visitors. We are not responsible for the accuracy, currency or reliability of the content of this website. The Government of Canada does not offer any guarantee in that regard and is not responsible for the information found through this link.
Visitors should also be aware that information offered by this non-Government of Canada site is not subject to the Privacy Act or the Official Languages Act and may not be accessible to persons with disabilities. The information offered may be available only in the language used by the site. With respect to privacy, visitors should research the privacy policies of this non-government website before providing personal information.
- Publisher - Current Organization Name: Government of Alberta
- Licence: Open Government Licence - Alberta
Data and Resources
-
Alberta Diamond Occurrences Dataset - (ASCII GRID)ASCII GridEnglish dataset ASCII Grid
-
Alberta Diamond Occurrences Dataset - (HTML)HTMLEnglish dataset HTML
-
Original metadata (https://open.alberta.ca/opendata)HTMLEnglish dataset HTML
-
Alberta Diamond Occurrences Dataset - (XML)XMLEnglish dataset XML
Contact Information
Electronic Mail Address: AGS-Info@aer.ca