Ellendale Diamond Field
The Ellendale Diamond Field is a cluster of lamproite intrusions located 125 km ESE of Derby within the WNW trending Lennard Shelf to the south of the Kimberley Block in the West Kimberly region of Australia. The Ellendale diamond field was once the source of up to 50% of the worlds supply of Fancy Yellow diamonds.[1] Ellendale's volcanic pipes intruded during the Miocene age between 22 to 19 Ma and nearly 48 lamproites have been mapped within the NW trending 1500 square kilometre (60 x 25 km) field . More than 100 lamproite intrusions are known over a wider 7500 sq. km area surrounding the Ellendale swarm. Some 45 of the Ellendale intrusives are volcanic crater deposits, while 3 are classed as volcanic sills. The lamproites are either leucite or olivine rich, with 60% being diamondiferous. The first Ellendale pipe was identified in 1976 with diamonds mostly mined from 2 open pit hard rock mines at the Ellendale 4 (E4) and Ellendale 9 (E9) lamprorite pipes. Although of low grade (5 to 14 carats per hundred ton), the Ellendale mines were characterised by a high proportion (75-90%) gem-quality stones, including colorless, yellow, green and brown diamonds.

Ellendale Fancy Yellow diamonds

High value Fancy yellow diamonds are a signature of the Ellendale Diamond field, and between 2009 and 2015 Tiffany & Co had exclusive rights to purchase 100% of the Fancy yellow diamonds produced at Ellendale. Ellendale Fancy yellow diamonds are typically highly lustrous, shiny surfaced, rounded tetrahexahedroid or dodecahedra. Many of the Ellendale diamonds have undergone a process called resorption where the diamond crystals have been partially dissolved in hot magma/plasma during their journey to the surface of the earth. Often more than 50% of the original weight of the diamond has been lost to this process.[2]
History of the Ellendale Field
A group of companies known as the Ashton Joint Venture[3]discovered the Ellendale Diamond Field in November 1976. Some 48 lamprorite pipes were subsequently identified and mining feasibility studies conducted over the next few years. In August 1979 a sample taken 420km away at Smoke Creek by the joint venture's geologist Maureen Muggeridge produced two diamonds and their focus very quickly shifted away from Ellendale to this new prospect, which was to eventually develop into the Argyle diamond mine. The development of the Ellendale deposits was left in limbo.
More than two decades later, geologists from the Kimberley Diamond Company (KDC) recognised eluvial diamond enrichment over the Ellendale pipes and after a lengthy legal battle, they wrested the Ellendale mining lease away from the Ashton Joint Venture.
Ellendale 9 (E9)
Despite diamonds first being discovered at the Ellendale 4 pipe, hard rock mining actually first began at Ellendale 15 kms to the north west at the Ellendale 9 (E9) pipe in May 2002 and continued under various owners until mid 2015.
Ellendale 4 (E4)
Mining began at the E4 pipe in 2005 but by 2009 the E4 mine was put on care and maintenance as the high Australian dollar combined with dwindling reserves began to make the E4 pipe uneconomic.
Abandonment of the E9 and E4 mines

In July 2015, mining activities ceased abruptly at the E9 and E4 hard rock mines when then owner Kimberley Diamond Company (KDC) entered into administration,[4] and subsequently into liquidation. The site was declared an abandoned mine site in accordance with the Western Australia , Mining Rehabilitation Fund Act 2012 (MRF Act) in December 2015.
Scientific significance
Until the discovery of diamonds in the Ellendale E4 and E9 lamprorite pipes it was believed that Kimberlite was the only economic source of diamonds in the world. The Ellendale discovery that lamprorite could also produce diamonds led to intense world wide diamond exploration and the subsequent discovery of the Argyle lamprorite diamond mine in the adjacent East Kimberley region of Australia about 420 kms to the north east of Ellendale.
New Mining Activities

As of 2021, two companies operate full mining leases within the Ellendale field. A small privately owned company, India Bore Diamond Holdings Pty Ltd (IBDH) operates a mining lease granted in the southern section of the field targeting a new alluvial deposit which has produced Fancy Yellow diamonds.[5] A second company, publicly listed Burgundy Diamond Mines (ASX: BDM) acquired some existing leases including the former E9 and E4 leases in early 2020[6] and plans to begin mining of previously abandoned deposits including an alluvial deposit known as Terrace 5 on the western edge of the Ellendale diamond field.
The potential for economically re-opening of the former hard rock mines at the E4 and E9 lamprorite pipes and/or associated colluvial deposits is being studied.
References
- "New lease of life for former Ellendale diamond mine". Retrieved 2020-09-20.
- "Diamonds Are Not Forever! Diamond Dissolution". www.gia.com.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - "Argyle Joint Venture - The Partners". 10 August 1998.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - "Jobs at risk as precious yellow diamond mine closes in WA". The West Australian. 1 July 2015.
- "Mining at long-dormant Aussie mine to begin in September 2021". Jeweller Magazine. 2 August 2021.
- "Gibb River Diamonds announces sale of option over Blina Project". www.reuters.com.
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