The tiny village of Ilakaka, Madagascar had barely 40 residents before 1998. Then, a large deposit of sapphires was discovered along a nearby riverbed, and caught the eye of some Thai businessmen in the gem trade. Word got out, and Ilakaka swelled to tens of thousands of residents - the center of a sapphire boom, today the source of nearly 50% of all the sapphires in the world. Illegal miners mixed with large-scale operations, all operating under little or no regulation, in a wild-west atmosphere of potential fortunes, lawlesness, violence and hardship.
Monday, May 3, 2010
The Sapphire Mines Of Madagascar
Blog Archive
- May (44)
- April (33)
- March (48)
- February (97)
- January (118)
- December (99)
- November (278)
- October (281)
- September (235)
- August (362)
- July (474)
- June (320)
- May (300)
- April (567)
- March (573)
- February (376)
- January (352)
- December (174)
- November (119)
- October (125)
- September (125)
- August (115)
- July (148)
- June (106)
- May (101)
- April (88)
- March (102)
- February (61)
- January (58)
- December (66)
- November (97)
- October (60)
- September (76)
- August (50)
- July (64)
- June (71)
- May (85)
- April (82)
- March (114)
- February (111)
- January (112)
- December (79)
- November (74)
- October (66)
- September (80)
- August (69)
- July (69)
- June (46)
- May (32)
- April (30)
- March (32)
- February (28)
- January (31)
- December (31)
- November (28)
- October (27)
- September (18)