Immortalized special burial -- diamond burial
the presence of diamonds is truly the last of our loved ones! the ashes of the dead are made into ashes diamonds, so-called diamond burials, but they are currently used only by a very small number of people, because such burials are acceptable and very expensive, and they provide information on them.
the cause of
the translation of deceased persons into diamonds is called “diamond burial”.
to meet the demands of those who feel that “graves and urn boxes are too rigid” to miss their loved ones, as these “diamonds” can be carried with them and can therefore be used as “beauties”.
the idea of urn diamonds is based on the fact that carbon is the main component of all animals and that carbon is the main component of diamonds.
when a person dies, it is not convenient to carry a gravestone and urn on his body, and relatives are unable to stay with their loved ones.
turning the ashes of the dead into blue diamonds and making jewelry for their loved ones to wear on them were a good solution.
it is both a beautiful decoration and the best remembrance of the dead by the family as jewellery.
monuments in chicago, usa, announced that they had invented a technology to turn ashes from burning corpses into diamonds and had successfully preserved precious diamonds for 3,000 families around the world.
the head of the company, greg hero, stated that it had taken three years to study the technology of turning ashes into diamonds, and that it had been tested over and over again, and had finally been made of human ashes into a diamond in july 2006.
first generation of urn diamond technology in the development of urn diamonds pthe first generation of urn diamond technology prevailed during the period 2005-2009, when the urn diamond technology was rather immature, requiring large amounts of urn and only a single colour, requiring a half-year-to-a-year time to cultivate diamonds, and had been eliminated by most companies.
the first generation is less technically pure than blue ash diamonds.
the second generation of
, which was used during the period 2009-2012, was developed in a period where only 150 grams of ashes were required, while pet urns could also be made as ashes diamonds and could achieve five colours through different temperatures and pressures.
second-generation technologies can be the purest white, but they are costly because of their complexity and the high environmental requirements for nurturing.
after 2012, the third generation of
third generation, with only 100 grams of ashes, will achieve 100 per cent of the carbon extracted for diamond cultivation.
and colour diamonds can grow to one carat, or even two.
and it only takes three to four months